This week's developments centered around one common theme: automation. Nokia expanded strategic AI partnerships with both Google Cloud and Amazon Web Services, bringing generative AI into operational assurance and autonomous networking. Ericsson's latest Mobility Report showed global 5G subscriptions surpassing three billion, with roughly half of worldwide mobile traffic now running over 5G. And throughout DTW Ignite, vendors repeatedly emphasized autonomous networking, unified operational data and AI-assisted operations. Individually, none of these announcements fundamentally changes the telecom landscape — collectively, they point toward an industry where network operations become increasingly automated, predictive and software driven.
The proposed acquisition of SFR by Bouygues Telecom, Iliad and Orange was the largest development of the week — a €20.35 billion transaction that would divide SFR's assets among its three primary competitors and reduce France's mobile market from four national operators to three. In the United States, Optimum announced its mobile business surpassed 700,000 lines through its MVNO arrangement with T-Mobile, and AT&T launched a $3 Unlimited Day Pass for eligible cellular-enabled iPads — available even when the customer's primary phone service is with another carrier. Additional developments included continued defaults under the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund and AXON Networks' acquisition of Greenwave Systems, adding software-defined mobile core and Network-as-a-Service capabilities to AXON's automation platform.
Regulatory policy and operator restructuring shaped the final week of May. A coalition of rural broadband, wireless, cable, and satellite interests asked the FCC to establish a uniform 180-day handset unlocking standard — a proposal that would make it easier for consumers to move compatible devices between providers while giving operators time to manage fraud and device financing risk. The FCC also advanced a broader compliance framework for voice providers: proposed changes to upstream provider verification and STIR/SHAKEN oversight would place greater responsibility on carriers to understand where traffic enters their networks and whether their partners are complying with federal robocall requirements. In Europe, Vodafone Romania prepared to complete the legal merger of Telekom Romania Mobile Communications into its existing operation, illustrating how European operators are using customer, spectrum, and infrastructure consolidation to improve scale in markets where mobile economics remain difficult.