Mavenir has announced an integrated AI platform developed with Red Hat that aims to help network operators monetise AI services through token-based consumption plans.
The platform is designed to allow operators to offer AI services in a manner similar to mobile data plans, with token-based usage billed through existing customer billing systems. Mavenir says operators will retain control over pricing, service-level agreements, and the models powering AI interactions.
According to Mavenir, the platform supports three operating models. Operators can use it to deliver their own branded AI services to subscribers, provide an AI infrastructure layer for AI grid deployments, or offer managed AI capabilities to enterprise customers on a token-based consumption basis.
The system uses Red Hat AI and Kubernetes infrastructure powered by Red Hat OpenShift. Mavenir says the architecture is designed to provide operators with a flexible, sovereignty-focused platform capable of running on-premises models and customised small language models for routine workloads.
The platform also supports policy-governed access to external frontier AI models for tasks requiring advanced reasoning or multimodal capabilities. Mavenir says operators can decide which model handles each request, who pays for it, and how it is billed.
Mavenir argues that operators can leverage existing billing and service-management systems to create new AI revenue streams, as token-based AI consumption mirrors familiar data-usage models. It said monthly AI token plans, enterprise quotas, and SLA-backed AI service tiers could create a new monetisation layer on top of connectivity.
The integrated AI platform combines Mavenir’s AI software platform with Red Hat’s enterprise Kubernetes and AI capabilities, delivered on validated hardware from third-party partners. The platform includes intelligent model routing, token optimisation, AI platform-as-a-service and MLOps capabilities, token charging, billing integration, closed-loop service assurance, zero-trust identity controls, and AI-specific security.
For enterprise customers, the platform enables operators to offer metered access to AI models, compute resources and AI tools as value-added services. For AI grid deployments, operators can use it as the compute and AI fabric for network-embedded AI applications and third-party workloads.
Operators can also use the platform to provide AI-powered products directly to subscribers, including AI assistant plans billed by token consumption, AI-enhanced network services, and operator-branded AI applications.
Mavenir says the platform is designed to support new AI revenue streams, predictable AI economics, data sovereignty, contractual SLAs for operator-managed AI services, and enterprise-grade security. The company will showcase the platform at DTW Ignite 2026 from 23 to 25 June.
Why does it matter?
Telecom operators are looking for ways to move beyond connectivity revenue as demand for AI services grows. Token-based billing could let operators package AI services in a familiar commercial model, using existing customer relationships, billing systems, and service-level agreements.
The announcement also points to a broader shift in AI infrastructure. By combining on-premises models, sovereign data controls, and selective access to frontier models, operators could position themselves as AI service providers for consumers, enterprises, and network-embedded applications rather than only as connectivity providers.
Would you like to learn more about AI, tech, and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!