Spolsky co-founded Stack Overflow with Jeff Atwood in 2008, explicitly framing the platform as a response to the inadequacies of existing programming Q&A resources (particularly Experts Exchange, which had become nearly unusable). The design was minimalist: ask a question, get answers, have the community vote on which answers are best, attach reputation to the people who give good answers. The reputation system aligned incentives: reputation came from helping others, and high reputation conferred trust across the platform. Over fifteen years the site accumulated tens of millions of questions and hundreds of millions of answers, touching virtually every programming language, framework, library, and tool in active use.
The site's function as diagnostic memory was partially designed and partially emergent. Spolsky and Atwood intended a high-quality Q&A platform; what they built turned out to be something closer to a distributed brain for the software profession. When a developer encountered a leak — a confusing error message, a performance problem, an integration failure — she went to Stack Overflow. The odds were high that someone else had encountered the same problem, that the encounter had produced a question, and that the question had been answered by someone who understood the underlying layer. The diagnosis was not just an answer to one person; it was a reusable artifact that any future practitioner could find.
The ChatGPT-era collapse in question submissions is documented and steep. Monthly new questions dropped from roughly 87,000 in March 2023 to 58,000 in March 2024 — a 32.5% decline in one year. Compared to the 2017 peak, the platform now sees roughly 75% fewer new questions. Since ChatGPT launched, submissions have fallen by approximately 76%. Developers stopped asking Stack Overflow because they started asking AI. The AI was faster, more conversational, and did not include the dismissive comments Stack Overflow's culture was notorious for. The migration was rational at the individual level and deeply consequential at the collective level.
The consequence is the structural one this volume repeatedly names. A Stack Overflow question and its answers were a public, searchable, community-validated artifact. Multiple practitioners could contribute. Wrong answers were downvoted. The diagnosis was not a single transaction but a durable record that accumulated into the collective memory of the profession. An AI conversation creates none of this. The exchange is private, unsearchable, uncorrected by community review. The answer may be right. If it is wrong, no one will know. The diagnostic memory that Stack Overflow accumulated over fifteen years is being replaced by a system that produces answers but does not accumulate understanding — and the memory itself, licensed to OpenAI, is being used to train the successor.
Stack Overflow launched on September 15, 2008. It was the first major project of Stack Exchange, the network Spolsky and Atwood built. Over the following decade it became the dominant programming Q&A resource, eclipsing and eventually replacing Experts Exchange, Usenet, and mailing lists. Its decline since late 2022 is the first sustained reversal in its fifteen-year history and coincides precisely with the arrival of AI coding assistants capable of answering programming questions in conversational form.
The platform was diagnostic memory as institution. It preserved the cumulative record of the profession's encounters with leaky abstractions.
The community-validated format was the point. Answers were corrected, refined, and contextualized by multiple practitioners, producing durable artifacts.
The decline is steep and documented. Roughly 76% fewer new questions since ChatGPT launched — the clearest measurement of the migration from community memory to private AI conversation.
The data was sold to OpenAI. The memory Stack Overflow accumulated is being absorbed into the system that is rendering the platform obsolete.
The replacement does not accumulate. AI conversations produce answers without producing the durable, searchable record Stack Overflow provided.
Defenders of Stack Overflow's cultural function argue that the decline in volume has been accompanied by an improvement in quality — the questions that remain are the hard ones, the ones AI cannot answer, which are exactly the ones that benefit from community diagnosis. Critics respond that the site's network effects require volume, that without the long tail of easy questions the hard questions lose their audience, and that the platform is in a death spiral. As of 2026 the resolution is unclear; what is clear is that the function Stack Overflow performed for fifteen years is no longer being performed by Stack Overflow, and no equivalent replacement has emerged.