AI Digest for IDinsight

February 13 – 27, 2026
13 updates across 3 categories
🌍 Field Applications 4 items
2

Anthropic–Rwanda 3-Year MOU for AI in Health & Education

Anthropic Β· Feb 17, 2026
First formal multi-sector government-AI partnership on the African continent. The 3-year MOU covers Claude integration for cervical cancer elimination, malaria and maternal mortality reduction, 2,000 Claude Pro licenses for educators, AI literacy training for public servants, and Chidi (a Claude-powered learning companion) deployed across 8 African countries.
3

India AI Impact Summit: A "Third Way" for the Global South

Rest of World Β· Feb 11, 2026
India's AI Impact Summit β€” the first hosted by a developing country β€” positions India as an alternative AI governance model between the US and China, framing AI as a public good. Multiple countries (Rwanda, Nigeria, UAE) are competing for AI leadership while development-sector AI narratives risk obscuring Big Tech dependency.
4

AI4D's Geographic Blind Spot: Ignoring Billions Beyond Africa

ICTworks Β· Feb 26, 2026
Comprehensive analysis finds AI-for-development research overwhelmingly focuses on Africa while ignoring South and Southeast Asia, Latin America, and MENA β€” where AI deployment rates are often higher. India leads globally at 59% company-level AI deployment; over 40% of ChatGPT traffic originates in middle-income countries led by Brazil, India, Indonesia, and Vietnam.
πŸ’¬ Debates 4 items
2

Made in Africa AI Competencies for Evaluators

MERL Tech Β· Feb 10, 2026
Research digest identifies 7 core competencies for African MERL practitioners using AI, including AI literacy, decolonial awareness, participatory community approaches, and data sovereignty. Most practitioners use AI informally for literature reviews and drafting, but face Africa-specific gaps: poor representation of African knowledge sources in training data and limited African language support.
3

AI Is Shifting Power from Governments to Tech Companies

Rest of World Β· Feb 18, 2026
Essay by NUS Dean Simon Chesterman argues today's tech giants wield power comparable to the East India Company and that the public-private divide matters more than North-South in AI governance. Governments have been reluctant to regulate, and AI is increasingly enlisted as an instrument of state policy.
4

IDinsight Alum Critiques AI Funding Dynamics

LinkedIn Β· Feb 14, 2026
Shared by @Becca Gong Sharp
Tony Senanyake (CEO of Fortify Health, IDinsight alum) published a critique of development funding dynamics that focus too much on the "shininess" of AI tools and too little on ethical obligations to create systems change and real-world results. Becca's commentary underscores the need to be intellectually honest about when not to use AI tools.
πŸ”§ Tooling 5 items
2

A Guide to Which AI to Use in the Agentic Era

One Useful Thing Β· Feb 18, 2026
Shared by @Tom Wein
Ethan Mollick's updated guide marks a "very large break with the past" β€” distinguishing Models, Apps, and Harnesses as three layers of AI tools. Highlights Claude Cowork for delegating multi-step office work, NotebookLM for research synthesis, and the shift from chatbot prompting to agent-style managing.
πŸ§ͺ Try it

Upload project documents to NotebookLM to create a searchable knowledge base for your evaluation β€” great for synthesizing across concept notes, workplans, and meeting notes.

3

Google WaxalNLP: Open Dataset for African Speech Technology

Google Β· Feb 2026
Shared by @Tom Wein
Open speech dataset covering 22+ African languages including Swahili, Yoruba, Hausa, Igbo, Kikuyu, Lingala, Luganda, and Shona. Data ownership is retained by African partner institutions β€” a model for responsible dataset development.
πŸ§ͺ Try it

Evaluate whether WaxalNLP languages overlap with IDinsight survey contexts for potential voice-based data collection or transcription improvements.

4

Claude Sonnet 4.6: Opus-Level Performance at Sonnet Pricing

Anthropic Β· Feb 17, 2026
New default model on Claude.ai and Cowork brings significant improvements in coding, data analysis, computer use, and long-context tasks. Matches Opus 4.6 on most real-world analytical work while being faster and consuming fewer usage credits.
πŸ§ͺ Try it

Switch to Sonnet 4.6 for everyday tasks β€” it matches Opus on most analytical work at lower usage cost, preserving your limits for heavy-lift projects.

5

Four Modes of Working with AI

LinkedIn Β· Feb 26, 2026
Shared by @Tom Wein
Practical framework for structuring AI use: Compression (distill information and find the signal), Expansion (generate options beyond your defaults), Reflection (stress-test thinking with a no-ego devil's advocate), and Execution (produce drafts, summaries, formats).
πŸ§ͺ Try it

Use Reflection mode as a "devil's advocate" for analysis plans and Terms of Reference β€” ask AI to challenge your assumptions before they're locked in.