When you hear X, a digital platform that hosts real-time updates across sports, business, and technology. Also known as a social media hub for breaking news, it’s where fans, investors, and everyday users go to see what’s actually happening — not what someone wants you to believe. On X, you won’t find fluff. You’ll find X posts that cut through the noise: a football manager’s blunt take, a government grant change that hits households, or a phone launch that actually matters.
People use X to track what’s next in sports, from Serie A showdowns to Premier League upsets. You’ll see how Liverpool’s manager chase for 100 points got derailed by Crystal Palace, or why Napoli clawed back to top Serie A after a loss to Genoa. It’s not just match results — it’s the pressure behind them. Then there’s African business, where big moves like Telkom selling its tower network for R6.5 billion reshape how companies grow. That deal didn’t just move money — it changed what South African telecoms can focus on next. And when SASSA raises grants by R10, or Kenya’s NSSF doubles contributions, it’s not just policy. It’s real cash in the hands of people who depend on it.
Meanwhile, technology trends, like Xiaomi’s 7,000mAh battery and Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, hit X hard. These aren’t specs on a billboard — they’re what people actually buy. And when a viral video falsely shows a Kenyan official slapping a minister’s aide, X is where fact-checkers like Africa Check step in to stop the lie from spreading. This isn’t just news. It’s accountability.
What you’ll find below isn’t a random feed. It’s a curated collection of stories that matter — where a 6-0 win in Liechtenstein, a 1-0 goal in Luanda, or a WWE title stolen with a Rolex all tie into the same thing: real events, real people, real consequences. Whether you care about football, grants, phones, or who’s winning what, you’ll find it here — no filters, no filler, just what’s happening now.
Written by :
Christine Dorothy
Categories :
Politics
Tags :
FTC
Media Matters
advertiser boycott
X
The FTC is digging into whether Media Matters and other groups worked together to push advertisers away from Elon Musk’s platform X, demanding records on alleged boycott strategies. The investigation heats up an already tense legal fight over claims that corporate ads ran next to hateful content on X.
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