Vidéotron Limited is an integrated Telecommunications company active in cable television, interactive multimedia development, video on demand, Cable telephony, wireless communication and Internet access services, primarily serving Québec, Canada, as well as some parts of Eastern Ontario. It is a subsidiary of Quebecor Media. Vidéotron serves 1,660,000 cable television customers, including over 830,500 digital cable (branded Illico) subscribers. Vidéotron also provides high-speed cable Internet access, with more than 1,000,000 subscribers, the most in Quebec, had activated 54,600 phones on its wireless service and was providing cable telephone service to nearly 742,900 customers as of July 2008. Vidéotron cable services are availble in Montreal, Quebec City, Sherbrooke, Saguenay and Gatineau. Vidéotron also serves areas in eastern Ontario, such as Rockland and the surrounding municipality of Clarence-Rockland. During its existence, Vidéotron cable services has also been available in Alberta, the United Kingdom, Africa, and the United States. One of its previous subsidiaries, Videotron Telecom, was financed by the well-known Carlyle Group. Vidéotron also provides telecommunication services to business and governments since the integration of Vidéotron Télécom into Vidéotron Ltée. These services include dark fiber, SONET, ATM, and Ethernet links as well as video circuits used by various television networks in Quebec. Vidéotron's cable community channels are branded as VOX.
History
Videotron Wireless NetworkIn July 2008, Videotron ltée and Quebecor officially acquired spectrum licenses for advanced wireless services from Industry Canada auction. At a total cost of $554,559,000, the licenses are entirely covering Quebec for an average of 40MHz spectrum, Toronto with 10MHz and south-east of Ontario. The network is expected to be fully operational in late 2009, in the mean time Videotron is still partly using Rogers wireless network to provide wireless service to their customers. Project Cleanfeed Canada and Vigilance on the NetIn November 2006, to address the problem of the access and proliferation of child pornography sites, Vidéotron, Bell Aliant, Bell Canada, MTS Allstream, Rogers, Shaw, SaskTel and Telus, in conjunction with cybertip.ca (a nationwide tipline for reporting the online sexual exploitation of children), announced the creation of Project Cleanfeed Canada, an initiative designed to block access to hundreds of child oriented pornography sites. However, some critics denounce the initiative, saying that this amounts to nothing more than internet censorshipcitation needed while in the mean time others applaused the initiative. 1 To better address the problem of Internet security for families in general, Videotron launched in 2007 the Vigilance on the Net campaign. The campaign visited several Quebec high schools in the Fall of 2007 to deliver security messages directly to teens and their parents. Considering the great success of the program, the tour will continue in 2008. Hot TopicsCRIA and customer privacySome Web sites reported that Vidéotron was the only Internet Service Provider in Canada willing to hand over personal information of its subscribers to the Canadian Recording Industry Association.citation needed. After further verification, this information turned out to be false. Like any other telecommunications provider, Videotron is subject to The Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act and is forbidden to provide personal information about its subscribers without a warrant. Extreme High-Speed InternetOn August 14, 2007 Videotron announced starting October 1 they will impose a 100 GiB per month download/upload limit with $1.50 per extra GiB to their previously unrestricted High-Speed Extreme Internet service, even to existing signed subscribers. 2. This decision created outrage among its Internet user, and has led to a class action suit against Videotron by consumer advocacy group Union des Consommateurs, the action is still pending.
Call CentresThe major centres are located in Montreal, Quebec City and St-Hubert. Vidéotron also has some customer service centres outsourced through various customer support agencies. Some of these include Utopia, Gexel Telecom, Synergie-Contact and Atelka. In 2007 Videotron made a partnership with Xceed Contact Center to outsource some of the call centre work in Egypt. ReferencesExternal links
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