Photos: RIAA sues over XM recording devices
RIAA is suing XM Satellite Radio over recording devices which store up to 50 hours of programming.
1 of 2 Bill Detwiler/ZDNET
Pioneer Inno
The RIAA says the $399 Pioneer Inno, which stores up to 50 hours of XM Satellite programming, is a tool for copyright infringement and can act as the equivalent of a download service such as iTunes. The recording industry sued XM Satellite for $150,000 in damages for every song copied by XM customers using the devices, which went on sale earlier this month.
2 of 2 Bill Detwiler/ZDNET
Samsung Helix
XM has a second radio receiver/MP3 player, the $399 Samsung Helix. It sports the same dimensions as the Inno and similarly stores 50 hours of programming.
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