In today's technology roundup: Ballmer rejects simpler software licensing, PayPal hacker banished, Energy-from-waste powers US army, and Facebook acknowledges access problems.
The department of labour proposes more power for the minister and an overhaul of labour broking.
The bank says it is instituting legal action against FoneWorx to get R1.5 million of its money back.
In this World Wide Wrap: GM ends eBay car sale pilot, Newegg files for IPO, and Alibaba.com to acquire HiChina stake.
In today's technology roundup: Red Hat demands software patents ban, Mozilla unveils cure, Robot fish could prevent crashes, and women dominate social networking.
In this World Wide Wrap: Free services fuel mobile TV, BBC calls for spectrum selling, and Irish broadcaster closes its doors.
ITWeb Governance, Risk & Compliance FEB 2025
Aligning GRC with Business Innovation and Agility
The company takes Absa to task over R1.5 million in fraudulently transferred money.
Legal wrangling by the former head of the agency delays the process.
In today's technology roundup: Hackers automate malware on Facebook, Amazon settles Kindle lawsuit, RIM patches BlackBerry phishing vulnerability, and more colleges offer gaming degrees.
In this World Wide Wrap: SK Telecom sells China Unicom stake, Germany gets live network upgrade, and Google Wave goes on public trial.
I don't think government really thought it out when it enacted several laws.
The eDivorce Web site allows couples to begin an uncontested divorce process without excessive legal costs.
A historic agreement between Icann and the US government means the Internet now belongs to the world.