Yahoo has downplayed concerns that its plans to recycle inactive user IDs could leave users exposed to hackers, saying only 7% of those IDs are tied to actual Yahoo email accounts.
Government is working on a plan that would help prevent redistributed land being used as collateral by banks, Land Reform Minister Gugile Nkwinti said.
Tax havens used by major international firms are depriving impoverished African states of tens of billions of dollars each year, former UN secretary general Kofi Annan said.
India's military stepped up efforts to reach villages and towns cut off by flash floods and landslides in the country's north as officials warned at least 1 000 people may have been killed.
President Jacob Zuma yesterday defended his controversial friendship with the Gupta family, telling the National Assembly that he had every right to be friendly with the powerful business family.
All Blacks wing Rene Ranger confirmed Thursday he was quitting his international career and would head to France at the end of the year on a lucrative contract with Montpellier.
Largest mining companies traded in London cut pay for their CEOs by an average 23% last year
James Gandolfini, who died of a massive heart attack in Italy yesterday, is thought to have been on a bonding trip with his teenage son Michael.
James Gandolfini, who died of a massive heart attack in Italy yesterday, is thought to have been on a bonding trip with his teenage son Michael.
Veteran rockers The Rolling Stones will be playing for over two hours at this year's Glastonbury festival it has been revealed.
Sunday Times is giving twenty lucky readers plus their partners the chance to attend the 'reincarnated' star studded 'Kings Of Chaos' concert happening at Sun City and at the Grand West in Cape Town.
Belief that so-called honour killings are justified is still common among Jordanian teenagers, a Cambridge University study revealed on Thursday.
Beautiful, provocative and glamorous images like these, some taken in the first half of the 20th century by the most famous names in the history of photography not only capture their time but our imagination.
Top Italian chefs are clamouring for the resignation of a junior minister who dismissed the country’s cuisine as a poor copy of trendy French cooking, poking a sore spot in a long-held kitchen rivalry between the two nations.
A tiny Samoan airline says it will introduce an “XL” class for super-sized passengers, featuring extra-wide rows and special ramps to help them reach their seats.
The first carbon-fiber bodied convertible in Aston Martin's history, the Vanquish Volante manages to retain its hard-top counterpart’s performance figures while increasing the style.
Yahoo has downplayed concerns that its plans to recycle inactive user IDs could leave users exposed to hackers, saying only 7% of those IDs are tied to actual Yahoo email accounts.
The Times Editorial: Waking on Friday morning, June 20 1913, the South African native found himself not actually a slave but a pariah in the land of his birth, Solomon Tshekisho Plaatje, a highly respected intellectual and influential political leader of the time,...
If there's one thing the rainbow nation does particularly well, it is engaging in a spot of pessimism.
The Times Editorial: Waking on Friday morning, June 20 1913, the South African native found himself not actually a slave but a pariah in the land of his birth, Solomon Tshekisho Plaatje, a highly respected intellectual and influential political leader of the time,...
Nigella Lawson, beautiful, clever and rich, is not the sort of woman we expect to be hit by her husband. And yet, here we are, gawking at photographs that apparently show Charles Saatchi with his hands around the heroine's throat - and her obvious, chilling terror.
As much as the country has changed, so, too, has it remained the same.
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