• How do Whirlpools Happen?

    Whirlpools are powerful spinning movements of water that can form in seas, rivers, or oceans. They occur when water currents moving in different directions meet and begin to twist around each other.

    When these opposing currents collide, the water cannot continue flowing smoothly, so it starts to spin rapidly, creating a circular motion. This spinning can sometimes become very strong, forming a whirlpool.

    Large whirlpools in the ocean are often caused by strong tides. One of the most famous examples is the Maelstrom, found between islands off the coast of Norway. Another well-known whirlpool is Charybdis in the Mediterranean, which was feared by ancient sailors.

    Although whirlpools can be dangerous, most are not strong enough to pull down large ships. However, smaller boats can be at risk if they get too close to the centre, where the spinning motion is strongest.
    How do Whirlpools Happen? Whirlpools are powerful spinning movements of water that can form in seas, rivers, or oceans. They occur when water currents moving in different directions meet and begin to twist around each other. When these opposing currents collide, the water cannot continue flowing smoothly, so it starts to spin rapidly, creating a circular motion. This spinning can sometimes become very strong, forming a whirlpool. Large whirlpools in the ocean are often caused by strong tides. One of the most famous examples is the Maelstrom, found between islands off the coast of Norway. Another well-known whirlpool is Charybdis in the Mediterranean, which was feared by ancient sailors. Although whirlpools can be dangerous, most are not strong enough to pull down large ships. However, smaller boats can be at risk if they get too close to the centre, where the spinning motion is strongest.
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  • Why do We Have Time Zones?

    Time zones exist because the Earth rotates, meaning different parts of the world experience daylight and darkness at different times. If everyone used the same clock, some places would have sunrise late at night and midday in the dark, which would be very confusing for daily life

    In 1884, the world was divided into time zones based on a reference point called Greenwich in London, England. This system ensures that the time in each region roughly matches the position of the Sun in the sky

    Each time zone is usually one hour apart from the next. As you travel east, the time becomes one hour later, and as you travel west, the time becomes one hour earlier. This keeps mornings, afternoons, and nights aligned with the natural cycle of daylight across the globe
    Why do We Have Time Zones? Time zones exist because the Earth rotates, meaning different parts of the world experience daylight and darkness at different times. If everyone used the same clock, some places would have sunrise late at night and midday in the dark, which would be very confusing for daily life In 1884, the world was divided into time zones based on a reference point called Greenwich in London, England. This system ensures that the time in each region roughly matches the position of the Sun in the sky Each time zone is usually one hour apart from the next. As you travel east, the time becomes one hour later, and as you travel west, the time becomes one hour earlier. This keeps mornings, afternoons, and nights aligned with the natural cycle of daylight across the globe
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  • Our clients we dropped off at the amazing Stellenbosch Hotel where they will be staying for a few weeks.

    Yes you heard me for a few weeks...

    Why you might ask Well let me tell you.

    After next week's Epic Tour they will be doing the fantastic Winelands tour with their families that will be joining them next week.

    #winelandstour #adventure #fun #family #thefullmontytravel
    Our clients we dropped off at the amazing Stellenbosch Hotel where they will be staying for a few weeks. Yes you heard me for a few weeks... Why you might ask Well let me tell you. After next week's Epic Tour they will be doing the fantastic Winelands tour with their families that will be joining them next week. #winelandstour #adventure #fun #family #thefullmontytravel
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  • Jolanda Nel Legacy Builder:
    GRATIS KLAS VIR BEGINNERS

    Donderdag aand 7 uur

    Hoe versterk ek my familie met dollars hier in SA as ek geen aanlyn ondervinding het nie?

    Kom kuier saam en ontdek Ε„ stap vir stap 2 ure werksdag waarin mense van alle ouderdomme leer om dollars te verdien met hul selfone!

    Nooi die hele familie almal is welkom!
    πŸ‘‡πŸ»πŸ‘‡πŸ»πŸ‘‡πŸ»πŸ‘‡πŸ»πŸ‘‡πŸ»
    Jolanda Nel Legacy Builder: https://meet.google.com/idq-ptay-auo
    Jolanda Nel Legacy Builder: 🀸‍β™‚οΈπŸ€Έ‍β™‚οΈπŸ€Έ‍β™‚οΈπŸ€Έ‍β™‚οΈπŸ€Έ‍♂️ GRATIS KLAS VIR BEGINNERS Donderdag aand 7 uur Hoe versterk ek my familie met dollars hier in SA as ek geen aanlyn ondervinding het nie? Kom kuier saam en ontdek Ε„ stap vir stap 2 ure werksdag waarin mense van alle ouderdomme leer om dollars te verdien met hul selfone! Nooi die hele familie almal is welkom! πŸ‘‡πŸ»πŸ‘‡πŸ»πŸ‘‡πŸ»πŸ‘‡πŸ»πŸ‘‡πŸ» Jolanda Nel Legacy Builder: https://meet.google.com/idq-ptay-auo
    MEET.GOOGLE.COM
    Meet
    Real-time meetings by Google. Using your browser, share your video, desktop, and presentations with teammates and customers.
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  • Kaiser Chiefs vs Orlando Pirates
    Kaiser Chiefs vs Orlando Pirates
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  • Well, my friends… let me tell you a story.

    The other day, I found myself in the cavernous hall of a global tech summit. You know the exact kind. Screens the size of buildings. Bass that vibrates in your chest. A stage so polished it looks like a mirror into the future. It’s the kind of room where companies don’t just speak—they decree.

    And today’s headline act was Facebook.

    The lights plunged into a sharp, synthetic blue. A perfectly rehearsed voice boomed through the hall as the Facebook representative strode to the podium, clad in a sharp suit and backed by a towering, glowing AI avatar that looked like it was made of pure data.

    “Ladies and gentlemen,” the executive began, a practiced smile flashing across his face. “We connect the world.”

    The crowd offered polite, expected applause.

    But from somewhere in the middle rows, a calm, clear voice cut through the blue light. “Do they connect back?”

    A few heads snapped around. The executive paused, his smile freezing for a fraction of a second, before he pressed the clicker. “We have over three billion users worldwide.”

    The screen behind him erupted into a chaotic blizzard of upward-trending arrows, glowing charts, and dizzying statistics.

    The voice from the audience replied, gently but firmly. “Active users… or people who signed up in 2009 and forgot their password?”

    A ripple of genuine laughter rolled through the crowd.

    The executive leaned into the microphone, his tone tightening. “We empower small businesses. We give them unprecedented reach.”

    The voice answered again. Not louder—just sharper. “Organic reach? Or the kind of reach where they have to pay you just to speak to the people who already chose to follow them?”

    Now, the audience wasn't just listening; they were captivated. People shifted in their seats. The polished veneer of the presentation was cracking.

    “We prioritize meaningful interactions!” the executive countered.

    “Between real people?” the voice asked. “Or between bots screaming at each other in the comments section?”

    Spontaneous applause broke out.

    At this point, the moderator stepped out from the wings, shielding her eyes from the glare. “Excuse me,” she said, scanning the crowd. “Who keeps doing that?”

    A spotlight swept over the sea of faces until it landed on something entirely unexpected.

    It was MySA.

    They weren't dressed in a corporate uniform. They weren't hiding behind a wall of metrics. Bathed in a warm, golden light that felt more like a sunrise than a screen glare, they stood there smiling. It was the quiet, undeniable confidence of a platform that knew exactly why it was built.

    The moderator blinked, intrigued. “Why don’t you come up here?”

    MySA walked onto the stage—not to fight, but to talk. The atmosphere on the platform immediately split. On the left, the cold, algorithmic blue of Facebook and its towering AI. On the right, the warm, inviting, human glow of MySA.

    The moderator looked between them. “Perhaps we can turn this into a dialogue.”

    The Facebook executive adjusted his cuffs. “We host pages with forty-five thousand followers.”

    MySA tilted their head. “And how many of those followers actually see an average post?”

    “Roughly three to five percent organically,” the executive admitted, his voice clipped.

    MySA smiled. “So, it’s like packing a massive stadium… but telling the speaker that only the first three rows are allowed to hear them.”

    The crowd erupted into laughter and nods of agreement.

    Facebook signaled dramatically, and the glowing blue AI avatar stepped forward, its digital eyes scanning the room. “My algorithm,” the machine synthesized, “ensures safety, optimizes content, and protects community standards. I remove harmful content.”

    MySA didn't flinch at the machine. “Including legitimate job posts from local mom-and-pop shops?”

    The AI’s lights flickered as it processed. “Policy violations are determined by algorithmic mass-assessment.”

    “So, context is optional,” MySA noted.

    The crowd murmured.

    “I maximize time spent on the platform,” the AI declared defensively.

    “And we maximize the value gained on the platform,” MySA replied smoothly.

    “I track behavioral patterns!” the AI boomed.

    MySA stepped closer to the edge of the stage, looking directly at the audience. The golden light seemed to follow them. “We build relationships.”

    The moderator leaned forward, entirely swept up in the moment. “What’s the real difference?”

    MySA paused, letting the silence hang for a moment.

    “The difference,” MySA said, their voice ringing with absolute clarity, “is that followers don’t equal customers. Numbers don’t equal trust. And the word ‘community’ is completely meaningless if a machine decides who is allowed to be seen.”

    The executive threw his hands up. “We operate at a global scale!”

    MySA turned to him. “Scale without substance is just noise.”

    You could hear a pin drop in that massive hall.

    Facebook tried one last, desperate swing. “We are the world’s largest social platform. My algorithm knows exactly what people want.”

    MySA shook their head slowly. “No. Your algorithm knows what keeps them scrolling. We know what keeps them growing.”

    That landed like a thunderclap.

    The moderator looked at MySA. “So, no holograms? No smoke and mirrors? What do you actually do?”

    “We verify users. We verify businesses,” MySA said, their voice warm and grounded. “We reward real participation and build local economies. On our platform, when someone supports a business, it means something. When someone follows, they actually see. When someone engages, it’s human.”

    As the session came to a close, the applause wasn’t explosive or manufactured. It was deep. It was thoughtful. It was real.

    Facebook quietly gathered its slides, the blue hologram dimming as they prepared for their next sterile earnings call.

    MySA stepped off the stage and walked back into the crowd, still smiling, still glowing. They hadn't just won an argument; they had reminded the room what technology was supposed to be for in the first place.

    Big stages are impressive. But meaningful platforms are powerful.

    And somewhere backstage, deep in the server racks, the Facebook AI quietly recalibrated its models. It processed one final, unprompted search query:

    “How to measure authenticity?”

    The system returned an error. The answer, of course, never appeared on the screen.

    Because authenticity isn’t calculated.

    It’s built.
    Well, my friends… let me tell you a story. The other day, I found myself in the cavernous hall of a global tech summit. You know the exact kind. Screens the size of buildings. Bass that vibrates in your chest. A stage so polished it looks like a mirror into the future. It’s the kind of room where companies don’t just speak—they decree. And today’s headline act was Facebook. The lights plunged into a sharp, synthetic blue. A perfectly rehearsed voice boomed through the hall as the Facebook representative strode to the podium, clad in a sharp suit and backed by a towering, glowing AI avatar that looked like it was made of pure data. “Ladies and gentlemen,” the executive began, a practiced smile flashing across his face. “We connect the world.” The crowd offered polite, expected applause. But from somewhere in the middle rows, a calm, clear voice cut through the blue light. “Do they connect back?” A few heads snapped around. The executive paused, his smile freezing for a fraction of a second, before he pressed the clicker. “We have over three billion users worldwide.” The screen behind him erupted into a chaotic blizzard of upward-trending arrows, glowing charts, and dizzying statistics. The voice from the audience replied, gently but firmly. “Active users… or people who signed up in 2009 and forgot their password?” A ripple of genuine laughter rolled through the crowd. The executive leaned into the microphone, his tone tightening. “We empower small businesses. We give them unprecedented reach.” The voice answered again. Not louder—just sharper. “Organic reach? Or the kind of reach where they have to pay you just to speak to the people who already chose to follow them?” Now, the audience wasn't just listening; they were captivated. People shifted in their seats. The polished veneer of the presentation was cracking. “We prioritize meaningful interactions!” the executive countered. “Between real people?” the voice asked. “Or between bots screaming at each other in the comments section?” Spontaneous applause broke out. At this point, the moderator stepped out from the wings, shielding her eyes from the glare. “Excuse me,” she said, scanning the crowd. “Who keeps doing that?” A spotlight swept over the sea of faces until it landed on something entirely unexpected. It was MySA. They weren't dressed in a corporate uniform. They weren't hiding behind a wall of metrics. Bathed in a warm, golden light that felt more like a sunrise than a screen glare, they stood there smiling. It was the quiet, undeniable confidence of a platform that knew exactly why it was built. The moderator blinked, intrigued. “Why don’t you come up here?” MySA walked onto the stage—not to fight, but to talk. The atmosphere on the platform immediately split. On the left, the cold, algorithmic blue of Facebook and its towering AI. On the right, the warm, inviting, human glow of MySA. The moderator looked between them. “Perhaps we can turn this into a dialogue.” The Facebook executive adjusted his cuffs. “We host pages with forty-five thousand followers.” MySA tilted their head. “And how many of those followers actually see an average post?” “Roughly three to five percent organically,” the executive admitted, his voice clipped. MySA smiled. “So, it’s like packing a massive stadium… but telling the speaker that only the first three rows are allowed to hear them.” The crowd erupted into laughter and nods of agreement. Facebook signaled dramatically, and the glowing blue AI avatar stepped forward, its digital eyes scanning the room. “My algorithm,” the machine synthesized, “ensures safety, optimizes content, and protects community standards. I remove harmful content.” MySA didn't flinch at the machine. “Including legitimate job posts from local mom-and-pop shops?” The AI’s lights flickered as it processed. “Policy violations are determined by algorithmic mass-assessment.” “So, context is optional,” MySA noted. The crowd murmured. “I maximize time spent on the platform,” the AI declared defensively. “And we maximize the value gained on the platform,” MySA replied smoothly. “I track behavioral patterns!” the AI boomed. MySA stepped closer to the edge of the stage, looking directly at the audience. The golden light seemed to follow them. “We build relationships.” The moderator leaned forward, entirely swept up in the moment. “What’s the real difference?” MySA paused, letting the silence hang for a moment. “The difference,” MySA said, their voice ringing with absolute clarity, “is that followers don’t equal customers. Numbers don’t equal trust. And the word ‘community’ is completely meaningless if a machine decides who is allowed to be seen.” The executive threw his hands up. “We operate at a global scale!” MySA turned to him. “Scale without substance is just noise.” You could hear a pin drop in that massive hall. Facebook tried one last, desperate swing. “We are the world’s largest social platform. My algorithm knows exactly what people want.” MySA shook their head slowly. “No. Your algorithm knows what keeps them scrolling. We know what keeps them growing.” That landed like a thunderclap. The moderator looked at MySA. “So, no holograms? No smoke and mirrors? What do you actually do?” “We verify users. We verify businesses,” MySA said, their voice warm and grounded. “We reward real participation and build local economies. On our platform, when someone supports a business, it means something. When someone follows, they actually see. When someone engages, it’s human.” As the session came to a close, the applause wasn’t explosive or manufactured. It was deep. It was thoughtful. It was real. Facebook quietly gathered its slides, the blue hologram dimming as they prepared for their next sterile earnings call. MySA stepped off the stage and walked back into the crowd, still smiling, still glowing. They hadn't just won an argument; they had reminded the room what technology was supposed to be for in the first place. Big stages are impressive. But meaningful platforms are powerful. And somewhere backstage, deep in the server racks, the Facebook AI quietly recalibrated its models. It processed one final, unprompted search query: “How to measure authenticity?” The system returned an error. The answer, of course, never appeared on the screen. Because authenticity isn’t calculated. It’s built.
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  • An Open Note to Facebook

    You can call it “AI moderation.”
    You can call it “policy enforcement.”
    You can call it whatever fits the narrative.

    But when real job opportunities are flagged and real entrepreneurs are restricted, it stops being about policy — and starts looking like fear of change.

    Because change is happening.

    Across South Africa, something is shifting. Quietly. Steadily. Intentionally.

    People are becoming more conscious about where they spend their time, their money, and their attention. Businesses are starting to question what thousands of “followers” really mean when fewer than 10% are active. When engagement drops. When visibility declines. When pages with years of history feel like empty halls.

    Numbers without interaction are just numbers.
    Followers without reach are just decoration.
    Presence without impact is just illusion.

    The reality is this: markets evolve.
    Communities shift.
    And people move toward platforms that value real opportunity and real connection.

    You may still have the big numbers.
    But the momentum is changing.

    South Africans are thinking differently.
    Supporting differently.
    Building differently.

    And step by step, the landscape is adjusting.

    This isn’t anger.
    It’s observation.

    And the shift has already begun.

    #ImpactSA #MySA
    An Open Note to Facebook You can call it “AI moderation.” You can call it “policy enforcement.” You can call it whatever fits the narrative. But when real job opportunities are flagged and real entrepreneurs are restricted, it stops being about policy — and starts looking like fear of change. Because change is happening. Across South Africa, something is shifting. Quietly. Steadily. Intentionally. People are becoming more conscious about where they spend their time, their money, and their attention. Businesses are starting to question what thousands of “followers” really mean when fewer than 10% are active. When engagement drops. When visibility declines. When pages with years of history feel like empty halls. Numbers without interaction are just numbers. Followers without reach are just decoration. Presence without impact is just illusion. The reality is this: markets evolve. Communities shift. And people move toward platforms that value real opportunity and real connection. You may still have the big numbers. But the momentum is changing. South Africans are thinking differently. Supporting differently. Building differently. And step by step, the landscape is adjusting. This isn’t anger. It’s observation. And the shift has already begun. #ImpactSA #MySA
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  • https://trustoria.co.za/article.php?slug=mysas-acceleration-signals-a-structural-shift-in-south-africas-digital-landscape
    https://trustoria.co.za/article.php?slug=mysas-acceleration-signals-a-structural-shift-in-south-africas-digital-landscape
    TRUSTORIA.CO.ZA
    MySA’s Acceleration Signals a Structural Shift in South Africa’s Digital Landscape
    South Africa’s digital ecosystem is witnessing the rise of a domestically built challenger
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  • The Largest Known Canyon in the Solar System

    The largest known canyon is not on Earth, it’s on Mars. Called Valles Marineris, this enormous canyon system stretches more than 4,000 km long, reaches 200–600 km wide, and plunges as deep as 10 km. That makes it about ten times longer and five times deeper than the Grand Canyon in the USA.

    Located just south of Mars' equator, Valles Marineris was discovered in 1971 by the Mariner 9 space probe, after which it was named.

    Unlike Earth’s canyons, which are mostly carved by flowing rivers, Valles Marineris is believed to have formed when Mars' crust cracked and pulled apart as the nearby Tharsis volcanic region cooled and shifted. Powerful Martian dust storms, with winds reaching up to 450 km/h, later helped erode and shape the landscape.

    The system is made up of vast interconnected trenches, including Ius Chasma, Tithonium Chasma, and the deep Hebes Chasma. Recent research even suggests that water-rich materials, possibly ice may lie beneath parts of the canyon, especially in the Candor Chaos region.

    With no rivers to reshape it and little erosion compared to Earth, this colossal scar across Mars has survived for millions of years, making it the largest canyon system in the entire Solar System.
    The Largest Known Canyon in the Solar System The largest known canyon is not on Earth, it’s on Mars. Called Valles Marineris, this enormous canyon system stretches more than 4,000 km long, reaches 200–600 km wide, and plunges as deep as 10 km. That makes it about ten times longer and five times deeper than the Grand Canyon in the USA. Located just south of Mars' equator, Valles Marineris was discovered in 1971 by the Mariner 9 space probe, after which it was named. Unlike Earth’s canyons, which are mostly carved by flowing rivers, Valles Marineris is believed to have formed when Mars' crust cracked and pulled apart as the nearby Tharsis volcanic region cooled and shifted. Powerful Martian dust storms, with winds reaching up to 450 km/h, later helped erode and shape the landscape. The system is made up of vast interconnected trenches, including Ius Chasma, Tithonium Chasma, and the deep Hebes Chasma. Recent research even suggests that water-rich materials, possibly ice may lie beneath parts of the canyon, especially in the Candor Chaos region. With no rivers to reshape it and little erosion compared to Earth, this colossal scar across Mars has survived for millions of years, making it the largest canyon system in the entire Solar System.
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  • Good Morning MySA Family

    And to everyone seeing this on Facebook as well — good morning to you too.

    There is something special happening.
    Not noise. Not hype. Not empty promises.
    But something real, structured, and proudly South African.

    First, from my heart — thank you to every business that has already joined MySA. You didn’t wait. You believed. You positioned yourselves early. You became part of building something that belongs to us.

    Now let me speak to three groups this morning:

    To every local business owner…
    To every entrepreneur building something from nothing…
    To every South African citizen looking to earn extra income or be part of real growth…

    We are inviting you to join our family.

    Because what we are building is bigger than a platform. It’s an ecosystem.

    And yes — the digital landscape is shifting. Facebook as we’ve known it is changing its structure and how content is distributed. Organic visibility is tightening. The traditional style of posting and expecting reach without constant payment is becoming more limited.

    This is not criticism.
    It’s simply reality.

    So I did something simple.

    I asked Google directly:
    “What makes MySA better for South African businesses?”

    And the response focused on clear, practical advantages:

    • A verified, South Africa–focused community
    • Reduced fake account and bot interference
    • A safer brand environment for businesses
    • Stronger local relevance and cultural understanding
    • Better organic visibility within a focused national ecosystem
    • Local support with South African context and compliance awareness

    That wasn’t marketing language.
    That was analysis.

    And the truth is simple:

    100 real, verified South Africans who can actually support your business are worth more than 10,000 random global impressions that never convert.

    Now let’s talk about what we are currently offering — and why it matters.

    Our current promotional rollout is giving 1,000 South African companies the opportunity to lock in their online marketing positioning for a once-off R1000.

    Not because we plan to “close doors.”
    But because we want to reward early belief.

    These 1,000 companies get to secure their lifetime positioning at an entry level that may never be repeated.

    For businesses that prefer flexibility, we also have options starting from R300 per year — making structured visibility accessible even to the smallest entrepreneur.

    This is not about pressure.
    It’s about positioning.

    And here is where it becomes emotional — because this part is close to my heart.

    As soon as these first 1,000 promotional positions are secured, we will officially launch the full MySA Rewards Program for all Verified Users.

    This means:

    Every time you:
    • Like a post
    • Comment
    • Support a local business
    • Stay active inside the MySA ecosystem

    You earn reward points.

    And those points are not symbolic.

    They can be exchanged for:
    • Electricity vouchers
    • Food vouchers
    • Service vouchers
    • Essential items
    • Gifts
    • Holidays
    • Support when you need it most

    This rewards system is funded by allocating a portion of advertising revenue from our business packages back into the community.

    Businesses grow.
    Users are rewarded.
    The system supports itself.

    And we are also introducing something powerful:

    Any citizen or company who helps us secure 10 businesses onto one of our marketing packages will receive a Special Account Upgrade.

    This upgrade increases the rate at which you earn points simply by being active.

    You support growth — and growth supports you.

    This is what community economics looks like.

    We are not building hype.
    We are building structure.

    We are not hiding our numbers.
    We are transparent about our growth.

    We are not attacking competitors.
    We are simply offering an alternative built with local focus and global ambition.

    MySA is South Africa’s dedicated social network.
    And through our international network, we are expanding beyond borders — but never losing our home focus.

    So this morning, I ask you:

    Are you going to watch the shift…
    Or be part of building it?

    To the businesses who already joined — thank you.
    To the entrepreneurs thinking about it — we see you.
    To every South African who wants to grow, earn, and support something meaningful — there is space for you here.

    Let’s build something that rewards loyalty.
    Let’s build something that values real people.
    Let’s build it properly.

    Together.

    #ImpactSA #MySA
    Good Morning MySA Family πŸ‡ΏπŸ‡¦ And to everyone seeing this on Facebook as well — good morning to you too. There is something special happening. Not noise. Not hype. Not empty promises. But something real, structured, and proudly South African. First, from my heart — thank you to every business that has already joined MySA. You didn’t wait. You believed. You positioned yourselves early. You became part of building something that belongs to us. Now let me speak to three groups this morning: To every local business owner… To every entrepreneur building something from nothing… To every South African citizen looking to earn extra income or be part of real growth… We are inviting you to join our family. Because what we are building is bigger than a platform. It’s an ecosystem. And yes — the digital landscape is shifting. Facebook as we’ve known it is changing its structure and how content is distributed. Organic visibility is tightening. The traditional style of posting and expecting reach without constant payment is becoming more limited. This is not criticism. It’s simply reality. So I did something simple. I asked Google directly: “What makes MySA better for South African businesses?” And the response focused on clear, practical advantages: • A verified, South Africa–focused community • Reduced fake account and bot interference • A safer brand environment for businesses • Stronger local relevance and cultural understanding • Better organic visibility within a focused national ecosystem • Local support with South African context and compliance awareness That wasn’t marketing language. That was analysis. And the truth is simple: 100 real, verified South Africans who can actually support your business are worth more than 10,000 random global impressions that never convert. Now let’s talk about what we are currently offering — and why it matters. Our current promotional rollout is giving 1,000 South African companies the opportunity to lock in their online marketing positioning for a once-off R1000. Not because we plan to “close doors.” But because we want to reward early belief. These 1,000 companies get to secure their lifetime positioning at an entry level that may never be repeated. For businesses that prefer flexibility, we also have options starting from R300 per year — making structured visibility accessible even to the smallest entrepreneur. This is not about pressure. It’s about positioning. And here is where it becomes emotional — because this part is close to my heart. As soon as these first 1,000 promotional positions are secured, we will officially launch the full MySA Rewards Program for all Verified Users. This means: Every time you: • Like a post • Comment • Support a local business • Stay active inside the MySA ecosystem You earn reward points. And those points are not symbolic. They can be exchanged for: • Electricity vouchers • Food vouchers • Service vouchers • Essential items • Gifts • Holidays • Support when you need it most This rewards system is funded by allocating a portion of advertising revenue from our business packages back into the community. Businesses grow. Users are rewarded. The system supports itself. And we are also introducing something powerful: Any citizen or company who helps us secure 10 businesses onto one of our marketing packages will receive a Special Account Upgrade. This upgrade increases the rate at which you earn points simply by being active. You support growth — and growth supports you. This is what community economics looks like. We are not building hype. We are building structure. We are not hiding our numbers. We are transparent about our growth. We are not attacking competitors. We are simply offering an alternative built with local focus and global ambition. MySA is South Africa’s dedicated social network. And through our international network, we are expanding beyond borders — but never losing our home focus. So this morning, I ask you: Are you going to watch the shift… Or be part of building it? To the businesses who already joined — thank you. To the entrepreneurs thinking about it — we see you. To every South African who wants to grow, earn, and support something meaningful — there is space for you here. Let’s build something that rewards loyalty. Let’s build something that values real people. Let’s build it properly. Together. #ImpactSA #MySA
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