winds

“Cessation of MarketForce’s B2B Online Commerce Branch”

Marketforce Founders Mesongo Tesh
Kenyan B2B e-commerce company MarketForce is winding down its B2B e-commerce business that served informal merchants (mom-and-pop stores) after a turbulent two-year period that saw it scale down operations severely. The shutdown of the B2B e-commerce arm dubbed RejaReja comes months after MarketForce withdrew the service from all its markets, including Nigeria and Kenya, save for Uganda. At its peak, it employed more than 800 people and served 270,000 informal merchants. MarketForce had raised $42.5 million, including $40 million debt-equity in a Series A round in 2022 at over $100 million valuation, to fuel the business. Several B2B e-commerce companies in Africa have also scaled back operations as the funding crunch persists.

” “Impending Reality: The Likely Ban of TikTok as Seen on TechCrunch Minute”

Tiktok Ban 3
TikTok users, however, are not taking the changing political winds — and their consequences — sitting down. TechCrunch spoke with several TikTok users that are incensed about, and fighting back against the potential ban of TikTok. But while the talk of a possible ban is getting all the press, what about the potential of TikTok simply being divested from its parent company, Bytedance? That would resolve the United States’ government’s issues, right? So, the bill may have two tracks in it for TikTok, but it could really just be a single-issue law in practice.