The pace of AI change in digital advertising is not slowing down; it’s compressing. February brought what felt like a month’s worth of news in a single week. Here are the five most impactful stories for online advertisers.
Source: The Verge | February 18, 2026
Perplexity AI has officially walked away from advertising, citing user trust as the reason. It’s a real about-face: the company was among the first generative AI platforms to test ads back in 2024, but began pulling them in late 2024, and executives confirmed on February 18 that there are no plans to go back. The timing couldn’t be more pointed. The announcement came days after OpenAI rolled out ads in ChatGPT for Free and Go tier users, and just over a week after Anthropic ran Super Bowl commercials that appeared to mock the very concept of chatbots serving ads. The AI ecosystem is now splitting into two: platforms that are monetizing through advertising and those betting users will pay to avoid it.
Source: Digital Marketing Institute | January 19, 2026
AI has quietly crossed a threshold in paid media. Platforms like Google (Performance Max, AI Max for Search) and Meta (Advantage+) no longer offer automation as an optional feature; they assume it. The AI handles bidding, audience targeting, creative assembly, and placement, which leaves human marketers doing something closer to strategic direction than hands-on campaign management. According to research from the Digital Marketing Institute, 44% of users who have tried AI-powered search now call it their primary source for internet searching. In a January 2026 survey of 100 ad leaders by Triton Digital, agency executives flagged that AI agents are beginning to take on strategy-to-execution workflows end to end, putting real pressure on traditional staffing and account management models.
Source: Google Blog | February 2026
Google reported that advertisers used Gemini to generate nearly 70 million creative assets inside AI Max and Performance Max campaigns in Q4 2025 alone, a 3x year-over-year increase. The number shows how fast AI creative tools have moved from something people experiment with to something people rely on. Google has added Veo 3, a video generation tool, to Ads Asset Studio alongside Nano Banana, so advertisers can now produce studio-quality video directly from a text prompt in minutes. Performance apparel brand Rhone has already deployed image-to-video generation in live campaigns. As AI takes over bidding and targeting, creative has become the main place left where advertisers can actually differentiate.
Source: Reuters | February 12, 2026
ByteDance officially announced Seedance 2.0 on February 10, positioning it as a production-ready AI video platform built for marketers, filmmakers, and e-commerce brands. Unlike earlier AI video tools that generated short, standalone clips, Seedance 2.0 produces coherent multi-shot sequences; a full commercial arc from product reveal to lifestyle shot to call-to-action, all from a text prompt or a single product photo. The platform accepts text, image, audio, and video as simultaneous inputs, outputs at up to 60 frames per second, and scored the highest camera control rating of any model in independent February 2026 benchmarks. Reuters reported the announcement went viral in China. ByteDance’s own headline: what used to take a creative team a full day now takes five minutes.
Source: The New York Times | February 17, 2026
Companies are realizing that AI chatbots have become influential enough to require active brand management, not just in search results or social feeds, but inside the models themselves. The New York Times reported on February 17 that Stacy Simpson, CMO of Athenahealth, discovered the company’s chatbot profiles were pulling outdated information from obscure sources and failing to surface Athenahealth as an option in relevant queries. As a result, a growing category of AI visibility and model optimization services has emerged to help brands monitor, audit, and influence how large language models represent them. The shift reflects a new reality: brands are no longer just trying to rank in search results; they are trying to shape how AI systems interpret and recommend them. According to Kantar’s 2026 data, 24% of AI users already rely on an AI assistant to make purchasing decisions on their behalf, and that number is moving in one direction.
February’s headlines cover a lot of ground, but they point in the same direction. AI is changing who makes the ads, what the ads look like, and where they get seen, and the companies building those tools are often the same ones running the ad auctions. Some fundamentals hold through all of it: know your audience, show up where they’re searching, and deliver something worth clicking. The harder question right now is where they’re searching, because that answer keeps changing.
If you missed last month’s post, read our article, AI in Online Advertising: 5 Key Trends from January 2026.
Questions about how these trends affect your campaigns? Let’s talk.
Stay tuned for next month’s update on AI in Online Advertising.
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