Intel · Filed May 16, 2025 · Published Jul 9, 2026 · verified — real USPTO data

Intel Files Patent for Sharing AI Models Across 5G Network Analytics Systems

When one part of a 5G network has already done the hard work of training an AI model, why should another part build the same thing from scratch? Intel's latest patent tries to answer that question.

Intel Patent: ML Model Sharing Between 5G Network Functions — figure from US 2026/0197246 A1
Figure from the official USPTO publication.
See all 9 drawings from this filing ↓
Publication number US 2026/0197246 A1
Applicant Intel Corporation
Filing date May 16, 2025
Publication date Jul 9, 2026
Inventors Meghashree Dattatri KEDALAGUDDE, Abhijeet KOLEKAR, Yi ZHANG
CPC classification 709/224
Grant likelihood Low
Examiner NGUYEN, MINH CHAU (Art Unit 2459)
Status Notice of Allowance Mailed -- Application Received in Office of Publications (Jul 7, 2026)
Parent application is a National Stage Entry of PCTUS2023081030 (filed 2023-11-24)
Document 20 claims

What Intel's 5G AI model sharing actually does

Imagine your phone company's network is a massive organization with dozens of departments, each crunching data to keep your calls clear and your video streams smooth. Right now, if two departments each need the same AI model to do their jobs, they might each build one independently, wasting time and computing power.

Intel's patent describes a system where one part of a 5G network can simply request and receive an already-trained AI model from another part, instead of starting over. One node asks for a specific model by name or ID, proves it has permission using an access token, and the other node sends back either the model itself or a link to where it's stored.

This is essentially a lending library for AI models inside a 5G network, letting different network analytics functions share their work rather than duplicate it.

How the model request and transfer process works

The patent centers on two types of logical functions inside a 5G core network: the Model Training Logical Function (MTLF), which is the part that actually trains AI models, and the Analytics Logical Function (AnLF), which uses those models to generate network insights.

Under Intel's design, an AnLF or MTLF node that needs an AI model can send a model provision request to another MTLF node. That request includes:

  • An access token (a credential proving the requester is authorized)
  • An analytics identifier or ML model identifier (a name or ID tag for the specific model needed)

The receiving MTLF then sends back a model provision response containing either the full model file packaged in a container, or a network address pointing to where the file can be downloaded.

These functions all live inside what 5G standards call Network Data Analytics Functions (NWDAFs), which are the AI-driven analytics engines baked into the 3GPP 5G core network specification. Intel's contribution is a defined handshake protocol for moving trained models between these engines.

What this means for 5G network efficiency

For mobile operators, training AI models is expensive in terms of computing time and energy. If multiple analytics nodes in the same network need the same model, having a built-in sharing protocol reduces redundant work and speeds up how quickly new analytics capabilities can be deployed across the network.

This patent sits squarely in the infrastructure layer that most people never see, but it shapes how efficiently your carrier's network can adapt in real time to congestion, interference, and traffic spikes. Intel, as a major supplier of hardware and software to telecom operators, would benefit from having this kind of model-sharing framework standardized in ways that align with its network platform products.

Editorial take

This is a narrow, infrastructure-level patent aimed at a specific gap in 5G network standards, not a flashy consumer-facing idea. Its value depends entirely on whether telecom equipment vendors and operators adopt this kind of model-sharing protocol, and on whether standards bodies like 3GPP pick up similar approaches. Worth a note for anyone tracking Intel's 5G software strategy, but not something that will make headlines beyond that audience.

The drawings

9 drawing sheets from US 2026/0197246 A1 · click any drawing to enlarge

Patent filing page

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Source. Full patent text and figures from the official USPTO publication PDF.

Editorial commentary on a publicly published patent application. Not legal advice.