Abstract

<p class="Abstract">Businesses in the telecommunications industry provide global communication using a variety of channels, including but not limited to mobile phones, landlines, satellites, the Internet, and other electronic media. These businesses built the networks that enable the global transfer of text, audio, speech, and video. Companies in the telecommunications industry include those that provide landline and cellular telephone service, as well as those that provide cable television, satellite television, and online access. Once upon a time, the telecommunications industry was dominated by a small group of extremely large multinational and regional conglomerates. The industry has been caught up in a wave of liberalization and innovation since the early 2000s. Government monopolies have been privatized in several nations, exposing them to an explosion of new rivals. As mobile services continue to grow at a faster rate than fixed-line ones, and as Internet traffic begins to surpass voice traffic as the dominant form of commerce, established marketplaces have been turned on their heads. The undertaken paper endeavors to highlight the vulnerabilities that the telecommunication networking sector could be facing in the present as well as the future in light of the usage of artificial intelligence as assistive and advanced tech.<em></em></p>

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