Cablemás

Cablemás, S.A. de C.V.
Limited liability company
Industry Telecommunications
Founded 1968
Headquarters Colonia Juárez, Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City
Products Cable television
Broadband internet
VoIP
Wireless
Parent Televisa
Website www.cablemas.com

Cablemás is a cable TV, internet and fixed telephony provider in parts of Mexico, owned by Grupo Televisa since 2009. The company has triple play services (cable TV, landline & internet). Its signal can be both analog and digital (the latter also features HD channels). The company has its headquarters in Colonia Juárez, Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City.

History

Cablemás, S.A. de C.V.[1] is a Mexican telecommunications company with its headquarters in Colonia Juárez, Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City.[2]

It is the second-largest cable operator in Mexico after Megacable. It has offered cable since the late 1980s, and broadband Internet since the late 1990s with approximately 953,000 cable TV customers, 325,000 high speed internet customers, and 180,000 telephony lines in 49 cities in Mexico (July 2010).[3] Cablemas is also the first company to distribute VoIP in Tijuana, Baja California. VoIP is the spearhead of Cablemas's new promotionals.

Due to the previous laws in Mexico, in the past, telecommunication companies cannot provide more than two services. An example of this is the company Telnor, which provides telephones and Internet. Another example is Megacable, a company that provides cable and broadband Internet. To provide more services, Cablemas made an alliance with Axtel, a new telephone company operating from Monterrey, and the new Cablemas-Axtel Alliance was created with initially nearly 1,000 customers. Nowadays, Cablemás offers also fixed telephony at its own.

Cablemas bases its primary operation in the city of Tijuana, which is also the city that produces the highest influx of money into the company.

From 2015, Cablemás disappears as a trademark to make way for Izzi Telecom,[4] following Televisa's strategy to unify its cable TV operations throughout the country under a single brand (just as Cablevisión).

Controversy

Ongoing issues with service on Isla Mujeres and in parts of Cancún and Merida have led to allegations of fraud against Cablemás.[5] Tests performed by local municipalities show that advertised rates of 10mbps are actually capped as low as .5 or even .3 mbps, or less than 5% of advertised speeds. The lack of a stable Internet connection, coupled with the company's virtual monopoly in isolated regions like Isla Mujeres, has resulted in unrest among businesses and residents. In December 2014, the municipality of Isla Mujeres vowed to investigate Cablemás and recommend sanctions to the governor of Quintana Roo.[6][7]

References

External links

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