Telli Brings AI to Schools. German Wikipedia Considers AI Ban. WebMCP Makes Websites Agent Ready. Meta Plans Face Recognition Glasses.

Show notes

The AI news for February 14th, 2026

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Here are the details of the day's selected top stories:

Telli: Lower Saxony is bringing an AI chatbot to all schools effective immediately.
Source: https://www.heise.de/news/Telli-Niedersachsen-bringt-KI-Chatbot-ab-sofort-an-alle-Schulen-11175693.html?wt_mc=rss.red.ho.themen.k%C3%BCnstliche+intelligenz.beitrag.beitrag
Why did we choose this article?
All schools in Lower Saxony can now use a school-wide AI chatbot — this is a concrete change to classroom tools, teacher workloads, student interaction with AI, and school IT/policy decisions.

The German-language Wikipedia is considering a comprehensive AI ban.
Source: https://www.heise.de/news/Deutschsprachige-Wikipedia-erwaegt-umfassendes-KI-Verbot-11175563.html?wt_mc=rss.red.ho.themen.k%C3%BCnstliche+intelligenz.beitrag.beitrag
Why did we choose this article?
A broad AI ban on the German‑language Wikipedia would change how articles are created, verified and edited — affecting readers, volunteer contributors, and anyone relying on Wikipedia as a source.

The Web as an AI database: Google's WebMCP is supposed to make websites 'Agent-ready'.
Source: https://the-decoder.de/das-web-als-ki-datenbank-googles-webmcp-soll-webseiten-agent-ready-machen/
Why did we choose this article?
Google's WebMCP would let autonomous AI agents interact with websites like users do — that can change e‑commerce, website traffic, and how businesses design sites and monetize visits.

Meta plans to add facial recognition to its smart glasses, report claims
Source: https://techcrunch.com/2026/02/13/meta-plans-to-add-facial-recognition-to-its-smart-glasses-report-claims/
Why did we choose this article?
Adding facial recognition to consumer smart glasses would let wearers identify people in real time — a major change for privacy, consent, safety, and public behavior that affects both users and bystanders.

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