Toll roads’ R14bn price tag
The cost of operating Gauteng's toll roads may be as high as R14 billion - more than the R6.22bn the roads agency said it would cost, The Star newspaper reported on Friday.

The cost of operating Gauteng's toll roads may be as high as R14 billion - more than the R6.22 billion the roads agency said it would cost, The Star newspaper reported. Photo: Itumeleng English, The Star
This amount excludes the cost of feasibility studies, the design of the toll system and the supply of e-tags.
The cost of upgrading the roads is estimated at R17.5bn.
The inflated operational costs were contained in a confidential report which was sent anonymously to The Star. The report is dated April 2010 and it discusses, in detail, the operation progress report on Gauteng Open Road Tolling.
The SA National Roads Agency Ltd (Sanral) denied the tolls were costing so much and said the tender to build and operate the toll roads was R6.22bn over eight years.
However, Sanral in its report indicated that the R6.22bn did not include VAT and that there were additional costs - but would not reveal these specific amounts to the newspaper. - Sapa
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Sean Kingston critical after crash
Reggae and rap star Sean Kingston is in critical conditional after a jet skiing accident on Sunday night, a report has said.
He is currently being treated in a trauma ward, due to the nature of his severe injuries, the report said.
According to the Daily Mail, the 21-year-old was rushed to a Miami Beach hospital after he struck a major bridge connecting Palm Island with the MacArthur Causeway.
The singer, who had success with the hit song Beautiful Girls, reportedly also had a woman on board with him, according to TMZ.
Shortly after the incident his representative released a statement.
“Sean Kingston was in an accident today. No further details are available at the moment. He and his family thank everyone for the well-wishes,” it said.
The singer had huge success with songs such as his 2007 hit Beautiful Girls, and currently with the single Letting Go (Dutty Love) with Nicki Minaj.
It is said that officials currently investigating the incident have ruled out alcohol as playing a part in the accident.
“My love & prayers are with Sean Kingston & his family,” she wrote on her Twitter page. - IOL
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Petrol price to drop
The retail price of all grades of petrol will drop by two cents a litre on Wednesday, the energy department said on Friday.

The retail price of all grades of petrol will drop by two cents a litre on Wednesday, the energy department said on Friday
The price of diesel with a 0.05 percent sulphur content would decrease by 38 cents a litre. That with a 0.005 percent sulphur content would fall by 37 cents a litre.
The wholesale price of illuminating paraffin would drop by 32 cents a litre.
The single maximum national retail price for illuminating paraffin would decrease by 42 cents a litre, the department said in a statement. - Sapa
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EBay, PayPal sue Google over mobile wallet
Within hours of the unveiling of "Google Wallet" on Thursday, eBay and PayPal filed a lawsuit charging that the internet giant tapped into trade secrets for the mobile payments project.
PayPal spent three years trying to work out a deal in which it would handle payments for Android smartphones, only to see Google scuttle the talks and hire PayPal lead negotiator Osama Bedier, according to court documents.
Google Wallet will initially work with Google's Nexus S 4G smartphone from Sprint, the third-largest US wireless provider, and will eventually be expanded to other phones equipped with near field communication (NFC) technology.
An NFC chip in a phone allows a user who has entered his or her credit card details to "tap-and-pay" for purchases at a checkout register equipped with the PayPass system from CitiMasterCard.
"By hiring Bedier, with his trade secret knowledge of PayPal's plans and understanding of Google's weaknesses as viewed by the industry leader, Google bought the most comprehensive and sophisticated critique of its own problems available," the court filing said.
"Google put Bedier in charge of its mobile payment business, virtually ensuring that Bedier would misappropriate PayPal's trade secrets concerning planning and competitive assessments in mobile payment."
Osama Bedier worked at PayPal as a vice-president of platform, mobile, and new ventures until being hired in January by Google.
Bedier was lured to Google by Stephanie Tilenius, who left her job as an eBay executive in late 2009 and went to work for Google, according to the lawsuit.
Google could not immediately be reached for comment on the allegations.
CONTINUES BELOW
Google Vice-President of Payments Osama Bedier demonstrates how Google Wallet will work during a news conference in New York on Thursday. (AP
Centre stage
Bedier and Tilenius took centre stage at the grand unveiling on Thursday of Google Wallet, a platform for using Android-based smartphones to pay for purchases at real world shops.
"[Bedier] had an intimate knowledge of PayPal's capabilities, strategies, plans, and market intelligence regarding mobile payment and related technologies," the court documents said.
"He is now leading Google's efforts to bring point-of-sale technologies and services to retailers on its behalf."
The lawsuit named Google, Bedier, and Tilenius as defendants, accusing them of misappropriation of trade secrets, breach of contract, and unfair business practices.
PayPal said it spent three years trying to work out a deal with Google in which eBay would handle payments at Android Market for smartphone applications, and that Bedier had led the negotiations.
"At the very point when the companies were negotiating and finalising the Android-PayPal deal, Bedier was interviewing for a job at Google without informing PayPal of this conflicting position," the court documents said.
PayPal called on the state court in the California county where both companies are based to order Google to "undo" the misuse of trade secrets and pay unspecified damages. -- AFP
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SAMA winners
And the winner is....
|
Album of the Year: |
Liquideep – Fabrics of the Heart |
|
MTN Record of the Year: |
Professor – Imoto |
|
Male Artist of the Year: |
Professor – University of Kalawa Jazmee |
|
Female Artist of the Year: |
Thandiswa Mazwai – The Forgotten Free (Live in Concert) |
|
Lifetime Achievement Award: |
Sipho Gumede and Lance James |
|
International Achievement Award: |
Die Antwoord |
|
Duo / Group of the Year: |
Liquideep – Fabrics of the Heart |
|
Newcomer of the Year: |
Locnville – Sun in my Pocket |
|
Best Selling Album: |
Locnville – Sun in my Pocket |
|
Music Video of the Year: |
The Parlotones – The Stars Fall Down |
|
MTN Best Selling Mobile Music Download: |
DJ Cleo & DJ Mzi |
|
Best Rap Album: |
Amu – The Principal |
|
Best Kwaito Album: |
Professor – University of Kalawa Jazmee |
|
Best Rock Album English: |
Prime Circle – Jekyll & Hyde |
|
Best Pop Album African: |
Theo Kgosinkwe – Grateful |
|
Best Pop Album Afrikaans: |
Juanita du Plessis – Engel Van My Hart |
|
Best Urban Pop Album: |
Kwela Tebza – Gauteng Made In South Africa / Mzansi |
|
Best Urban Dance Album: |
DJ Kent – I Can’t Survive |
|
Best Pop Album English: |
Jax Panik – I am Jax Panik |
|
Best Sokkie Dans Album: |
Kurt Darren – Die Beste Medisyne |
|
Best Maskandi Album: |
Bhekumuzi Luthuli – Imali Yabelungu |
|
Best Contemporary Jazz Album: |
Ological Studies – OS Freedom |
|
Best African Traditional Gospel Album: |
Sechaba – Thank You |
|
Best Traditional Jazz Album |
Tutu Puoane – Mama Africa |
|
Best Instrumental Album |
Wouter Kellerman – Two Voices |
|
Best Popular Classical Album |
Peter Martens & Luis Magalhaes – Beethoven Cello Sonatas |
|
Best Jazz/Instrumental/Popular Classic DVD |
SterlingEQ - Live in Concert at the Artscape Opera House, Cape Town |
|
Best R&B/Neo-Soul Album |
Leanne – The Journey |
|
Best Urban Gospel Album |
Patrick Duncan – Worship in Colour |
|
Best Urban DVD |
Thandiswa – Dance of the Forgotten Free |
|
Best Reggae Album |
Jah Seed – No Retreat No Surrender |
|
Best Producer |
Leanne – The Journey |
|
Best Engineer |
Freshlyground – Radio Africa |
|
Best Album Packaging |
Versus the Wolf – Uncovering Faces |
|
Remix of the Year |
Stimela – Turn on the Sun |
|
Best Adult Contemporary Album |
Steve Hofmeyr – Duisend en Een |
|
Best Rock Album: Afrikaans |
Van Coke Kartel – Skop, Skiet en Donner |
|
Best Country Music Album |
Manie Jackson – Manie Jackson |
|
Best Afrikaans Gospel Music Album |
Willie Joubert – Ek Wil Jubel |
|
Best Afrikaans Traditional Music Album |
Mooiplaas Boere Orkes – Boere Lekkerkry |
|
Best Afrikaans DVD |
Romanz – Treffers Live |
|
Best Alternative Music Album: Afrikaans |
Bittereinder – n’ Ware Verhaal |
|
Best Kiddies Album: Afrikaans |
Alta Joubert and Minkie Burger – Lollos 2: Bons Dat Dit Gons |
|
Best Adult Contemporary Album: English |
Freshlyground – Radio Africa |
|
Best Alternative Music Album: English |
Yoav – A Foolproof Escape Plan |
|
Best Contemporary Christian Music Album |
CRC Radiation – With All My Heart |
|
Best Global Chart DVD |
The Parlotones – Live Design |
|
Best Kiddies Album: English |
African Treehouse – African Numbers |
|
Best Global Dance Album |
Goldfish – Get Busy Living |
|
Best Multi-Artist Live DVD |
Huisgenoot Skouspel 2010 – Huisgenoot Skouspel 2010 |
|
Best-selling True-Tone |
DJ Mzi and DJ Cleo – Nababantwana |
|
Best-selling DVD |
The Parlotones – Live Design |
|
Best South Sotho Music Album (SeSotho) |
Morusu – Morusu Vol. 2 |
|
Best Tsongo Music (XiTsonga) Album |
Thomas Chauke – Shimatsatsa No. 30 |
|
Best Venda Music (TshiVenda) Album |
Zozo Sangere Super Beat – Tshelede |
|
Best Alternative Music Album: African |
Nomsa Mazwai – Nomisupa |
|
Best Mbaqanga Album |
Soul Brothers – Thul’ Ubheke |
|
Best Adult Contemporary Album: African |
Stimela – A Lifetime |
|
Best African Contemporary Gospel Album |
Mthunzi Namba – Mercy Live in Durban |
|
Best Traditional African Acapella Gospel Album |
Amadodana Ase Wesile – Ke Dumetse Ho Morena |
|
Best Traditional/African Adult Contemporary African DVD |
Stimela – Live in Concert: 30 Years |
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Credit card skimming scam
"Customers are also urged to remain vigilant as the fraudsters' main aim is to access customer funds by stealing information off your card as well as getting your secret PIN," said Itumeleng Monale, Standard Bank director of self service channels, in a statement.
"It is therefore imperative that customers protect their card and PIN information."
Skimming, which is a global problem, usually takes place when fraudsters capture card data on devices similar to those used for legitimate point-of-sale or ATM transactions.
"The industry has been hard hit by this modus operandi, which has been around for years; however an increase in these attacks during the last two years is prevalent due to the availability of high-tech skimming devices in the open market."
The devices fit snugly over the card slot on an ATM and can even include a camera to record the PIN number.
"The main point of compromise still occurs when customers' cards are presented to a third party," Monale said.
"Cards and PIN numbers are harvested by syndicate members when they either distract or observe our customers typing in their PIN numbers.
"The rule of thumb is never to let your card out of your sight and, when entering your PIN, to cover the PIN pad," she said.
Customers should also keep their daily withdrawal limit as low as possible to minimise loss. The bank advised customers not to insert their cards into slots that looked as if they had been tampered with. If customers suspect a card had been tampered with, they should immediately stop it.
They should also review their bank statements regularly and should not send emails containing their account number and expiry date.
Keep cards in sight and report lost and stolen cards immediately, the bank advised.
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Doomsday forecaster sets new date
Los Angeles - The evangelical Christian broadcaster whose much-ballyhooed Judgment Day prophecy went conspicuously unfulfilled on Saturday has a simple explanation for what went wrong - he miscalculated.

Harold Camping speaks during a taping of his show Open Forum in Oakland, California. Camping, a radio and television preacher, had predicted the end of the world this past Saturday
Instead of the world physically coming to an end on May 21 with a great, cataclysmic earthquake, as he had predicted, Harold Camping, 89, said he now believes his forecast is playing out “spiritually”, with the actual apocalypse set to occur five months later, on October 21.
Camping, who launched a doomsday countdown in which some followers spent their life's savings in anticipation of being swept into heaven, issued his correction during an appearance on his “Open Forum” radio show from Oakland, California.
The headquarters of Camping's Family Radio network of 66 US stations had been shuttered over the weekend with a sign on the door that read, “This Office is Closed. Sorry we missed you!”
During a sometimes rambling, 90-minute discourse that included a question-and-answer session with reporters, Camping said he felt bad that Saturday had come and gone without the rapture he had felt so certain would take place.
Reflecting on scripture afterward, Camping said it “dawned” on him that a “merciful and compassionate God” would spare humanity from “hell on Earth for five months” by compressing the physical apocalypse into a shorter time frame.
But he insisted that October 21 has always been the end-point of his own End Times chronology, or at least, his latest chronology.
The tall, gaunt former civil engineer with a deep voice and prominent ears has been wrong before. More than two decades ago, he publicly acknowledged a failed 1994 prophecy of Christ's return to Earth.
To publicise his latest pronouncement, the Family Radio network posted over 2 000 billboards around the country declaring that Judgment Day was at hand, and believers carried the message on placards in shopping malls and street corners.
Asked what advice he would give to followers who gave up much or all of their worldly possessions in the belief that his Judgment Day forecast would come true, Camping drew a comparison to the nation's recent economic slump.
“We just had a great recession. There's lots of people who lost their jobs, lots of people who lost their houses ... and somehow they all survived,” he said.
“People cope, he added. “We're not in the business of giving any financial advice. We're in the business of telling people maybe there is someone you can talk to, and that's God.” -Reuters
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Giggs unmasked as ‘cheater
London - A British politician defied a court order on Monday by identifying Manchester United's Ryan Giggs as the soccer star fighting a legal battle to prevent newspapers from publishing allegations of an affair.

Manchester United's Ryan Giggs holds his children Zach and Libby following their English Premier League soccer match against Blackpool at Old Trafford on Sunday
The release of Giggs' name will be seen as a victory for the media over celebrities and their lawyers after an increasingly farcical game of cat-and-mouse that prompted Prime Minister David Cameron to promise a review of the country's privacy laws.
For weeks, British media have been fighting the growing use by the rich and famous of “super injunctions” - English court orders which prevent publication of unwelcome stories and prohibit journalists from even reporting that a ban is in place.
A newspaper in Scotland, which has its own legal system, ran a thinly disguised photograph of Giggs on Sunday over an article calling it “unsustainable” to bar reporters from naming the man identified in hundreds of Twitter postings as one of the celebrities using court orders to stifle sex scandals.
“With about 75 000 people having named Ryan Giggs on Twitter, it's obviously impracticable to imprison them all,” Liberal Democrat politician John Hemming said in parliament.
Hemming, who has campaigned for press freedom, used parliamentary privilege - which allows parliamentarians to raise controversial legal issues without fear of prosecution - to name the player with impunity.
Asserting the independence of the judiciary, the High Court in London later again turned down a request from the Sun newspaper, part of Rupert Murdoch's media empire, to formally lift the bar on naming the player.
Explaining his decison, senior judge Michael Tugendhat noted the law of privacy was also concerned with intrusion and harassment.
Giggs is expected to be in Manchester United's squad for their Champions League final against Barcelona on Saturday where he could add to his record as the most decorated player in the history of the English game.
Aged 37, he is married with two children, and has an image as one of the sport's gentlemen.
It is alleged that he had an affair with reality television star and former Miss Wales Imogen Thomas.
Lawyers representing the player had asked US-based Twitter via a London court for information about the users of the messaging website who published details of his private life.
Hemming said this was a step too far.
“If you are going to have an expensive firm of lawyers chasing down ordinary people, with a view to threatening them with a jail sentence because they have gossiped about a footballer, that is fundamentally wrong,” he told BBC TV.
English newspapers have responded to bans taken out by a number of celebrities, including other sports stars and actors, by making references to them in gossip columns in the knowledge that readers, having read up on the internet, will spot the intention behind the apparently innocent stories.
Lawyer Roderick Dadak said the case showed how hard it was to regulate online gossip.
“It has drawn the attention of all, the judiciary and parliament, to the fact that the internet is pretty much uncontrollable,” Dadak of media firm Lewis Silkin told Reuters.
“Anyone can post whatever they want out of the jurisdiction and there is nothing you can do about it,” he added.
Attorney General Dominic Grieve announced on Monday that a parliamentary committee would study the issues raised in what has turned into a clash between politicians and the judiciary.
Cameron, in a television interview, said earlier: “It is rather unsustainable, this situation, where newspapers can't print something that everyone else is clearly talking about.
“The danger is that (court) judgments are effectively writing a sort of new law, which is what parliament is meant to do.”
Politicians have also used parliamentary privilege to disclose that former Royal Bank of Scotland head Fred Goodwin had won a gagging order. Goodwin came under fire for taking a generous pension after his bank had to be rescued by the state. - Reuters

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