What did the filing actually say? Oracle's application US20250232123A1 (“Large language model aggregator,” published 2025-07-17) says: don't bet on one model — route across many. Assigned to Oracle International Corporation and classified CPC G06F 40/35, it covers aggregating multiple large language models behind a single interface.

The business logic is the multi-model reality enterprises now live in. No single model is best at everything, prices vary, and customers fear lock-in. An aggregator that routes each request to the right model — by capability, cost, or policy — is the orchestration layer that turns a chaotic model market into a manageable, billable service.

“Generative artificial intelligence-based techniques are disclosed herein to conduct conversations of various types with multiple Large Language Model Services at once.”— U.S. Patent Application 2025/0232123 A1 source

Oracle reports AI within its cloud and applications businesses and discusses AI strategy in commentary without isolating orchestration economics, which is standard. The application is the granular record under that strategy: dated 2025, owned, aimed at the multi-model layer that is becoming a distinct part of the enterprise AI stack.

Published is not granted — scope is unsettled — and we attribute no revenue to it. It also doesn't establish a shipping product. What it documents is that the orchestration-and-routing layer of enterprise AI was an explicit 2025 IP target for a major enterprise vendor.

For the markets reader, the frame is that value is migrating up the stack — from owning the model to orchestrating across models. The LLM-aggregator application is a primary document that one of the largest enterprise vendors saw that shift and filed for the layer where it happens.