Vidéotron serves 1,830,400 cable television customers, including over 1,517,600 digital cable subscribers. Vidéotron also has more than 1,408,200 high-speed cable Internet subscribers, the most in Quebec. As of September 2013, the company had activated 478,000 mobile phones, and was providing cable telephone service to nearly 1,281,200 customers. Vidéotron's cable services are available in the greater areas of
Montreal,
Quebec City,
Gatineau,
Sherbrooke,
Trois-Rivières and
Saguenay. Vidéotron also serves areas in eastern Ontario, such as
Rockland and the surrounding municipality of
Clarence-Rockland, as well as parts of
New Brunswick near the Quebec border. Vidéotron offers broadband and
IPTV-based
digital cable television under the Helix and Illico brands, which is based on
Comcast's X1 platform and hardware. Helix serves as a successor to the company's existing Illico TV digital cable platform. Vidéotron's
community channels are branded as
MAtv. The company offers a subscription video on-demand service known as Illico+ (formerly Club Illico). It has produced original series such as
Escouade 99,
Portrait-Robot, ''
The Night Logan Woke Up (La nuit où Laurier Gaudreault s'est réveillé)
and Mégantic''. Vidéotron cable services were once available in the United Kingdom, but were acquired and merged into
Cable & Wireless plc along with
Bell Cablemedia and
NYNEX Corporation in 1997. The company also used to operate in Africa and the United States. One of its previous subsidiaries – Videotron Telecom (not to be confused with Videotron Mobile) – was financed by the
Carlyle Group. Vidéotron has provided telecommunication services to business and governments since the integration of Vidéotron Télécom into Vidéotron Ltée. The services include dark fiber, SONET, ATM, and Ethernet links as well as video circuits used by various Quebec television networks.
Cable telephone service On July 29, 2004, Vidéotron announced plans to launch a telephone service using VoIP technology by the first half of 2005. Vidéotron launched its cable phone service in late 2004 to compete with Bell Canada and Telus. Deployment of this service started on Montreal's South Shore. By press release on January 24, 2005, Vidéotron announced that 300,000 customers on Montreal's South Shore had access to this service and that deployment would continue all over Quebec throughout 2005. Vidéotron also announced that about 2,500 customers had already subscribed to this service, following a trial conducted in the fall of 2004. Vidéotron was also the first cable provider in Canada to launch a cable phone service.
Mobile network In July 2008, Videotron ltée and Quebecor acquired spectrum licences for advanced wireless services from an
Industry Canada auction at a total cost of $554,559,000. The licences cover Quebec for an average of 40 MHz spectrum, Toronto with 10 MHz and south-east Ontario. The network was launched on September 9, 2010. Infrastructure work for a pre-4G
HSPA+ wireless network was done over the span of three years, Videotron now having its own cellular communications resources. Vidéotron was the only provider in Canada that sold the short-lived
Garmin Nuvifone A50 smartphone. In 2013, Rogers and Vidéotron struck a 20-year deal, enabling Vidéotron to share its network with
Rogers Wireless. This network sharing agreement enabled Vidéotron to deploy
LTE on its network in Quebec in 2014, in partnership with Rogers. The agreement also enabled Vidéotron customers to use the Rogers Wireless network as a Vidéotron partner network in order to allow texts to be sent or received, calls to be made and for data to be used across Canada. In 2016, Vidéotron revamped its plans, allowing customers to make unlimited calls, send and receive texts and use data in the United States as well, due to partnerships with US carriers. Vidéotron began beta testing in 2018 for a new mid-range mobile
flanker brand, '''''', in Quebec and in Ottawa. In 2023, as an aspect of
Rogers Communications' acquisition of
Shaw Communications, parent company Quebecor acquired Shaw-owned
Freedom Mobile.
Technical support The major centres are located in Montreal, Longueuil, Quebec City, Gatineau, Joliette, Saguenay and St-Hubert. Vidéotron also has outsourced customer service centres that include Utopia, Gexel Telecom and Atelka. In 2007, Videotron formed a partnership with Xceed Contact Centre to outsource some of the call centres to
Egypt. ==Controversy==