NVIDIA Revolutionizes Telecom with Agentic AI

NVIDIA's agentic Artificial Intelligence transforms telecom network operations, promising efficiency and advanced capabilities.

Global telecommunications networks handle immense volumes of data, with millions of user connections generating over 3,800 terabytes per minute. This unprecedented flow, encompassing traffic data, performance metrics, and configurations, challenges traditional automation tools. At NVIDIA’s GTC conference, new developments were announced to revolutionize telco operations using large telco models (LTMs) and AI agents through the NVIDIA AI Enterprise platform.

NVIDIA’s partners, including SoftBank, Tech Mahindra, and Amdocs, are leveraging LTMs, specialized large language models trained specifically on network data. These models power AI agents that automate decision-making, enhance operational efficiency, and boost network performance. LTMs are optimized for real-time network event interpretation and continuous learning to adapt to new challenges, aiming to reduce downtime and improve security.

Companies are deploying these innovations to address complex network issues. SoftBank’s LTM automatically adjusts network configurations during events with massive traffic. Tech Mahindra utilizes NVIDIA’s tools to offer a comprehensive network insight platform, while Amdocs, BubbleRAN, and ServiceNow develop AI agents to enhance 5G deployment and network incident resolution. These advancements seek to accelerate AI adoption across telecommunications, delivering cost savings, increased productivity, and improved customer experiences.

78

Impact Score

European Union delays key Artificial Intelligence Act obligations

European Union lawmakers have agreed to revise the Artificial Intelligence Act, delaying major high-risk compliance obligations and easing some overlapping requirements. The changes give businesses more time to prepare while preserving the law’s core framework for high-risk systems and transparency rules.

HMRC signs £175m Quantexa deal for fraud detection

HM Revenue and Customs has signed a £175 million, 10-year agreement with Quantexa to unify fragmented data and strengthen fraud detection. The deployment is designed to automate routine work while keeping decisions transparent, auditable and subject to human approval.

Us supercomputers test new Artificial Intelligence chip suppliers

Sandia National Laboratories is evaluating chips from Israeli startup NextSilicon as major chipmakers shift their roadmaps toward Artificial Intelligence. The move reflects growing concern that mainstream processors are deprioritizing the scientific computing features government labs still need.

EU Artificial Intelligence Act amendments delay some deadlines and add new bans

A provisional Digital Omnibus on Artificial Intelligence would push back several EU Artificial Intelligence Act deadlines, refine how the law interacts with sector rules, and introduce new prohibited practices. The package also expands limited bias-testing allowances and strengthens centralized oversight for some high-impact systems.

Qwen 3.5 raises concerns about censorship embedded in model weights

A technical analysis of Alibaba Cloud’s Qwen 3.5 points to political censorship circuits embedded directly in the model’s learned weights. The findings highlight operational, compliance, and product risks for startups building on third-party Artificial Intelligence models.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.