Montreal Gazette

Bell ordered to pay Québecor $ 137M

Failed to prevent satellite use: court

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The Quebec Court of Appeal has ordered Bell ExpressVu to pay $ 137 million, including interest, to Québecor subsidiari­es Vidéotron and TVA for failing to prevent the piracy of its satellite signal between 1999 and 2005.

The court determined Bell’s inadequate efforts to prevent stolen access to Express Vu’s signal cost broadcasti­ng partners such as Vidéotron, Cogeco and Star Choice substantia­l revenues.

By gaining free access to Bell, viewers could watch Vidéotron programmin­g at no cost, reducing the number of paid Vidéotron subscriber­s and royalties paid to specialty channels of the Frenchlang­uage TVA network that had been distribute­d by Bell since 1998.

The unanimous ruling by Quebec’s highest court upheld a lower court decision that said the satellite TV division of BCE’s Bell neglected to implement appropriat­e security to prevent piracy of its ExpressVu service.

However, the province’s top court ordered Bell to pay a bigger penalty — $ 82.3 million to Vidéotron and $ 404,000 to TVA Group, plus interest and experts’ fees.

Based on its 73 per cent market share in Quebec and the three per cent rate of “acceptable” pirating, Vidéotron lost more customers to pirating than Quebec Superior Court Justice Joel Silcoff determined in his $ 1- million award, the Appeal Court ruled.

Québecor chief executive officer Pierre Dion said the “landmark decision” sheds light on how Vidéotron and TVA were deprived of substantia­l revenue because consumers could get TV service through pirated satellite signals rather than paying for cable.

Bell said it strongly disagreed with the ruling and will seek leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.

 ?? JOHN MAHONEY/MONTREAL GAZETTE FILES ?? Some TV viewers get their signals illegally, and at no cost, from paid satellite subscriber­s, a court has found.
JOHN MAHONEY/MONTREAL GAZETTE FILES Some TV viewers get their signals illegally, and at no cost, from paid satellite subscriber­s, a court has found.

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