Telco Magazine July 2025 | Page 73

signalling a shift from isolated use cases to integrated, multi-agent ecosystems.
Second is the growing importance of high-quality data. Although data has always been valuable, AI-powered networks rely heavily on its accuracy, completeness and availability.“ The importance of data is escalating. Everything will depend on how well enterprises can use their data,” Wayne notes.
Lastly, robust digital infrastructure like subsea cables, terrestrial fibre and data centres. It is essential to support distributed AI and cloud computing.“ This plumbing enables these vast opportunities,” says Wayne.
Surging demand continues to outpace infrastructure growth, with power availability emerging as a key constraint. Integrating AI and automation in telecommunications marks more than a technical shift; it requires fundamentally rethinking how networks are designed, operated and managed.
The advancement of AI is unstoppable. In 1959, British mathematician and cryptologist I. J. Good predicted:“ Within a generation, I am convinced, few compartments of intellect will remain outside the machine’ s realm – the problem of creating‘ artificial intelligence’ will be substantially solved.”
While it has taken more than one generation to reach this point, Good’ s vision quickly materialises. Today, AI and automation touches nearly every sector and region globally. With progress accelerating, it’ s not hard to imagine that the next generation will see growth far beyond what even Good anticipated. telcomagazine. com 73