The Washington Times

Samsung Group

Latest Samsung Group Items
  • Dutch judge bans sale of Samsung Galaxy phones

    A Dutch judge has issued an injunction banning the sale of some models of Samsung Galaxy smartphones from October, ruling they breach a patent owned by Apple Inc.


  • Illustration: Xinhua

    BLOOM: Chinese agitprop lights up Times Square

    Propaganda comes in all sizes, and communist China wants a piece of Times Square now. Xinhua, the state-controlled propaganda agency of the Chinese Communist Party, has leased a long-term advertising logo space in Manhattan's iconic Times Square, renting a huge LED sign called a "spectacular" in U.S. advertising parlance. According to the New York Times, the Xinhua sign is underneath a sign for Prudential and above signs for Samsung, Coca-Cola and Hyundai brands.


  • Samsung second quarter profit slides 18 percent

    Samsung's net profit slid 18 percent in the second quarter as weakness in semiconductors and liquid crystal displays countered the electronics giant's growing strength in smartphones.


  • Samsung second quarter profit slides 18 percent

    Samsung's net profit slid 18 percent in the second quarter as weakness in semiconductors and liquid crystal displays countered the electronics giant's growing strength in smartphones.


  • Economy Briefs

    Economists increasingly expect hiring to pick up in the second half of the year, even as overall growth is likely to slow.


  • Study at Samsung says cancers unrelated to jobs

    A study commissioned by Samsung into cancers among six of its semiconductor workers found they were unrelated to exposure to chemicals on the job but the electronics giant is not yet releasing the full results.


  • Study at Samsung says cancers unrelated to work

    A study commissioned by Samsung into cancers among six of its semiconductor workers found they were unrelated to exposure to chemicals on the job but the electronics giant is not yet releasing the full results.


  • Seaport businesses view trade pact as a good deal

    From here, the world's fifth-largest seaport sends Kia and Samsung products to the United States on Hyundai ships, while boatloads of American beef and iPhones come the other way.


  • Review: For smartphones, what's too big or small?

    With scores of smartphones available, one obvious way for them to stand out is with size. Two new phones take that to extremes: HP's tiny Veer 4G and Samsung's massive Infuse 4G.


Happening Now