Deutsche Telekom Is Rebuilding Itself as an AI-Native Company Using OpenAI
Germany's largest telecom is overhauling customer service, networks, and internal workflows with OpenAI models in a full-stack transformation.
Reporting from Business Insider, an RBC Capital Markets survey of more than 100 chief information officers has returned a number that eliminates ambiguity: 100% of respondents are budgeting for AI or large language model projects in 2026 — the first time any major industry survey has hit the ceiling.
The supporting data is as telling as the headline figure. Nearly 90% of those CIOs say token costs are now manageable, a quiet but critical signal that the economics of AI deployment have shifted. More than half already have AI systems running in production, not in pilot. Another 35% expect to reach production within six months. OpenAI leads the pack in active enterprise deals.
When you cannot find a single holdout in a 100-person executive survey, you are not measuring enthusiasm — you are measuring a market that has already committed. The remaining variable is execution speed, not intent.
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Germany's largest telecom is overhauling customer service, networks, and internal workflows with OpenAI models in a full-stack transformation.
Researchers at EPFL created AI-generated videos optimized not for aesthetics but for neurological effect, raising immediate questions about manipulation.
Meta starts manufacturing its own AI chip next month, co-designed with Broadcom and built by TSMC, after clearing validation in just six weeks.