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Showbiz : Lil Wayne et Birdman veulent faire définitivement la paix

Depuis février 2026, Lil Wayne et Birdman semblent avoir définitivement tourné la page de leur long conflit public et judiciaire. Bien que leur relation ait été marquée par des années de tensions extrêmes, les deux figures emblématiques de « Cash Money Records » ont officiellement décidé d’enterrer définitivement la hache de guerre. Himra: le rappeur envisage d’arrêter …

L’article Showbiz : Lil Wayne et Birdman veulent faire définitivement la paix est apparu en premier sur Africa Top Success.

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Happyment Coin: Turning a $390B Wellness Market Into Investable Value

In today’s world, stress, burnout, and untreated mental health challenges are at an all-time high. While digital health solutions are growing, they often struggle to reach the people who need them most, especially in underserved communities. That’s where Happyment Coin comes in. The Story Behind the Idea The idea was born out of a simple...

The post Happyment Coin: Turning a $390B Wellness Market Into Investable Value appeared first on TechTrends Africa.

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Why Prompt Engineering is a Must-Have Skill for African Entrepreneurs

In today’s business world, generative AI is no longer a futuristic buzzword. Whether you’re drafting a business proposal, designing a flyer, generating marketing videos, or writing code, AI tools like ChatGPT, Grok, Veo 3, and Gemini can help you move faster and smarter. In the same way that mastering email and social media became non-negotiable...

The post Why Prompt Engineering is a Must-Have Skill for African Entrepreneurs appeared first on TechTrends Africa.

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5 Times African Businesses Fought People For Bad Reviews And It Backfired

Some customers write a bad review. Sometimes a brand fights back. And sometimes, the fight becomes headline news.

In an era where a single tweet, TikTok, or Facebook post can dent a brand’s reputation, some African companies have taken “defending their name” to extremes; dragging customers and critics to court, threatening multimillion-dollar suits, or even involving police.

From tomato paste makers and biscuit brands to beauty labels and smartphone giants, these five African companies turned what should have been minor customer complaints into full-blown legal battles, and in the process, showed just how thin the line is between defending reputation and torching it.

Here are real cases revealing the perilous line between protecting reputation and silencing dissent:

1. Erisco Foods vs. Chioma Okoli (Nigeria)

In September 2023, Chioma Okoli, a consumer in Lagos, posted a Facebook review claiming that Erisco’s Nagiko Tomato Mix tasted “too much sugar”.

What followed was a chain of legal actions. Erisco filed a petition, the Police arrested Okoli, and the matter turned into a full-blown court case.

Erisco’s CEO, Eric Umeofia, made some forceful statements:

“I am pursuing legal charges against her because I have a conscience. Is she right to falsely criticise my product, and people are supporting her?,” he fumed. “I have over 3000 people in my factory; indirectly, we are paying 20,000 people. I cannot allow this type of ‘syndicate’ to come and destroy my business.”

Okoli’s legal representation countered strongly. She has threatened to demand NGN 500 M (~USD 334 K at current rates) from Erisco for violation of her human rights, saying the company’s actions went far beyond what is reasonable.

The saga has become a lightning rod in Nigeria for debates about weaponising cybercrime laws to muzzle legitimate consumer criticism.

This case also highlighted the potential for the Cybercrime Act in Nigeria to be used in defamation or “misinformation” cases, raising concerns among consumer rights advocates, activists, and legal experts about the chilling effects on legitimate criticism.

2. Nuvita Biscuits vs. TikTok Reviewer (Kenya)

Back in 2018, Kenyan TikTokers and Facebook users began complaining that Nuvita’s biscuits were “shrinking” in size while prices rose.

When a popular content creator posted a sarcastic video showing a tiny biscuit in her palm, Nuvita hit back. They issued public denials, flagging takedown requests, and allegedly pressuring the influencer’s agency to silence her.

The dispute escalated into public rows, removal requests for ads, and reported attempts to pressure or discredit the critic, a classic example of a brand pushing back at a consumer’s public review and commentary.

Rather than quelling the backlash, Nuvita’s combative stance supercharged it, with memes, boycott hashtags, and coverage in Kenyan business outlets dissecting its PR blunder.

The incident became a textbook cautionary tale for Kenyan marketers on the dangers of escalating snarky reviews into corporate vendettas.

3. Van Deventer Inc vs. Sizwe Mdakane (South Africa)

In 2023, a South African law firm, Van Deventer Inc, attempted to use the courts to silence a former client, Sizwe Mdakane, after he posted a negative review of the firm’s service on Google Reviews.

Mdakane complained that the advice he received from junior practitioners at the firm was poor. The firm believed this criticism “implied it was unprofessional, dishonest and untrustworthy,” and sought a court order to force the removal of the post and restrain Mdakane from making further comments.

The Gauteng High Court rejected the application. Judge Stuart Wilson, in his ruling, stressed that what matters in defamation isn’t necessarily the intent of the critic, but how a “reasonable reader of ordinary intelligence” would interpret the statement. He found that Mdakane’s comments, while critical, did not meet the legal threshold for defamation that justifies gagging speech.

The judgment was hailed by legal commentators as a landmark win for consumer speech in South Africa.

4. Native Child Africa vs. Beauty Influencer (South Africa)

In 2021, South African haircare brand Native Child Africa sought an interdict (court injunction) against a local beauty influencer who had posted Instagram Stories calling its products unsafe.

The company argued the posts were false and defamatory; the court granted an interim interdict forcing the influencer to stop posting any further criticism pending full trial.

Consumer-rights groups criticised the move as “corporate censorship via lawfare,” warning it could chill honest product reviews.

The case underscored how South African defamation law can be used pre-emptively to muzzle critics, even before any full evidence hearing.

5. OPPO Kenya vs. AIfluence / Influencers

A more modern twist on review-based conflict is playing out in the influencer economy. In early 2025, OPPO Kenya sued the marketing agency AIfluence over a dispute triggered by content creators who claimed they were not paid for their work promoting OPPO’s Reno12 series campaign.

Influencers like Flaqo Raz publicly shared that they had created three months’ worth of content in only two weeks under pressure from OPPO and AIfluence, only for payments to be delayed or not delivered, even five months later.

OPPO Kenya insists it fulfilled its obligations to AIfluence, making an initial 50 % down payment, then the remaining 50% once work was complete, on 25 October 2024.

Still, with unpaid influencers complaining, OPPO filed suit alleging defamation and brand damage due to the agency’s failure.

The earlier mentioned Flaqo, put it plainly: “How you both have handled the influencer team is absolutely disappointing and downright shameful.”

OPPO insists it paid AIfluence in full and accused the agency of defamation for letting unpaid influencers tarnish its brand.

The post 5 Times African Businesses Fought People For Bad Reviews And It Backfired appeared first on WeeTracker.

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How Africa’s Tech Sector Is Defying Odds and Scaling Fast

As connectivity, talent, and venture capital come together to empower a new generation of entrepreneurs, Africa’s tech sector is poised for a revolution. Kevin Dillon, a co-founder of the Africa Bridge Fund, claims that now is the ideal moment to unleash the continent’s potential in artificial intelligence and technology innovation. “Africa possesses all the necessary...

The post How Africa’s Tech Sector Is Defying Odds and Scaling Fast appeared first on TechTrends Africa.

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The State of Bank Modernisation in Africa

By deploying a progressive and accelerated modernisation strategy, African financial institutions can fast-track their digital transformation to gain market share from mobile money operators, as well as deliver the level of customer experience needed to fend off neobank competitors. Africa’s financial services landscape has undergone seismic change over the past few decades, supported by an...

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How Agile Project Management and the Scrum Framework Are Powering the Next Generation of Software in Africa

In the race to build software products that matter, African tech teams are increasingly embracing agile methodologies. Not just because they’re fashionable, but because they work. At the core of this movement is Scrum—a powerful, lightweight framework enabling high-performing teams to deliver value faster, adapt quickly, and build with greater focus. As startups across the...

The post How Agile Project Management and the Scrum Framework Are Powering the Next Generation of Software in Africa appeared first on TechTrends Africa.

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Google Has Changed Its "G" Logo for the First Time in Nearly a Decade

Summary

  • Google's iconic "G" logo receives a slight update with adjusted curves and proportions for a cleaner, more modern feel
  • This marks the first logo update in nearly a decade
  • The signature blue, red, yellow, and green color scheme remains consistent

Google, the ubiquitous gateway to information, is subtly refreshing its iconic "G" logo, ushering in a new era for the world's most recognized initial.

While the core four-color palette – blue, red, yellow, and green – remains instantly familiar, the update introduces a refined approach to the letterform itself. Expect to see a "G" that feels a touch more open, perhaps with slightly adjusted curves and proportions, contributing to a cleaner and more contemporary feel across devices. This evolution isn't a radical departure, but rather a thoughtful iteration, ensuring the logo remains both recognizable and optimized for the diverse range of screens and contexts where it lives.

This subtle yet significant update reflects Google's ongoing commitment to innovation and user experience. By refining its core visual identity, Google aims to create a logo that feels both timeless and forward-looking, embodying the dynamic and ever-evolving nature of the platform itself. It's a visual whisper, a gentle nudge towards the future of search and information access, all within the comforting embrace of the familiar Google colors. As reported by 9to5Google, the last time Google had a major change to its logo was in September 2015 when it updated its font to Sans-Serif. Now nearly a decade later, the new "G" logo appears without distinct borders between the colors, instead blending into one another. The update is currently visible on Pixel phones and slowly rolling out the change

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