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There is a persistent challenge at the heart of broadband operations. Service providers collect enormous amounts of network and Wi-Fi telemetry, yet still struggle to use it to improve in-home connectivity.
The modern home generates huge volumes of data across devices, applications and connectivity layers. But translating those fragments into actionable operational intelligence has historically depended on human expertise, manual workflows and reactive support models.
That challenge is getting harder. AI-driven applications, connected devices and technologies such as Wi-Fi 7 are increasing both traffic volumes and network complexity. But consumers don’t care about complexity: they equate Wi-Fi with broadband and when performance drops, the service provider gets the blame. Support organizations are under pressure to improve the in-home connectivity experience while controlling costs, reducing escalations and avoiding truck rolls.
This is where AI is beginning to move from experimentation into operational necessity.
Operators are exploring how AI can simplify broadband operations, improve service quality and automate troubleshooting. The challenge is not a lack of data. It is the ability to turn operational telemetry into usable intelligence that can scale across customer care and network operations.
Nokia’s Corteca AI is aimed directly at that problem.
The approach is built on a massive data foundation: 225 billion anonymized Wi-Fi data points collected every 24 hours across millions of broadband lines globally. That domain-specific intelligence allows AI tools to recognize broadband and Wi-Fi behavior patterns in ways general-purpose AI systems cannot. The goal is not simply to surface more data, but to help operators identify likely causes, recommend actions and resolve issues faster.
One of the clearest use cases is customer care. Broadband troubleshooting remains difficult to scale efficiently, particularly in environments with high turnover among Level 1 support agents and increasingly sophisticated home networking environments.
Our specialized AI assistant can support care agents directly within troubleshooting. Agents can ask questions in plain language, receive guidance on dashboard features and broadband concepts, and follow step-by-step remediation paths, helping reduce escalations and improving first-contact resolution. We’re also introducing agentic AI solutions for network analysis and troubleshooting that can run root cause analysis and guide remediation across broadband operations.
And rather than positioning AI as a standalone assistant, we’re embedding AI-driven intelligence into broadband workflows. Many operators want to integrate their own data, models and operational systems rather than commit to closed ecosystems. Nokia’s fixed networks agentic AI strategy emphasizes interoperability and open integration via the Model Context Protocol (MCP).
The direction of travel is becoming clearer across the industry. Broadband networks are evolving from static connectivity infrastructure into adaptive operational platforms capable of identifying issues earlier, automating resolution and improving how services are experienced inside the home.
For operators facing rising complexity and growing customer expectations, the real opportunity with AI is transforming operational data into intelligence that can improve how broadband networks are deployed, operated and experienced every day.
