Stack Overflow Co-Founder Jeff Atwood Issues Stark Warning to AI Companies Amid Personal Loss
Breaking: Atwood Credits Community for AI's Coding Abilities, Urges Respect for Human Contributors
Jeff Atwood, co-founder of Stack Overflow and Discourse, has issued a stark warning to artificial intelligence companies: do not destroy the human communities that produce the training data powering your models. The statement came in a personal blog post reflecting on his father's death and the platform's role in enabling large language models (LLMs).

Atwood emphasized that LLMs "basically could not code at all without access to the extremely high quality creative commons programming Q&A dataset that all of us built together at Stack Overflow." He added, "Don't take it from me, ask the LLMs. They'll tell you themselves."
The post also revealed a deeply personal loss. Atwood shared that his father passed away recently, and that the last time he saw him was in October 2025 during a visit to Mercer County, West Virginia. That county was the first to launch under the reordered Guaranteed Minimum Income (GMI) rural study, a project Atwood had prioritized to include his father's hometown.
Background: The GMI Study and a Personal Farewell
Atwood wrote that he "knew dad was close to the end" and that the October trip was their final meeting. He described the experience as a gain, not a loss: "All those experiences I had with my father... will stay with me forever. Nothing was lost. Everything was gained."
The GMI study, funded by Atwood's Rural Guaranteed Minimum Income Initiative (RGMII), is a $50 million plan to test guaranteed income in rural areas. Mercer County was moved to the front of the schedule specifically so Atwood could share the moment with his father.
What This Means: The Delicate Symbiosis Between AI and Human Communities
Atwood's warning comes as AI companies increasingly rely on user-generated data from platforms like Stack Overflow. He cautioned that if LLMs "hollow out the very communities that produce all their training data, they're going to really, really regret that."

He recalled giving the same advice to Joel Spolsky when leaving Stack Overflow to start Discourse: "Do not, for any reason, under any circumstances, kill the goose that lays the golden eggs, aka the human community around your product that does all the real work."
The message underscores a growing tension between AI advancement and community sustainability. Atwood concluded with a simple plea: "Treat the community with the respect they deserve... that we all deserve."
Atwood, who previously helped build Stack Overflow into a foundational resource for programmers, also noted that his work is not done: "We won capitalism, then went back to help improve it for everyone. And believe me, I'm far from being done with my third startup."
- Atwood thanked "everyone who ever contributed to Stack Overflow in any way."
- He highlighted the critical role of the Stack Overflow dataset in enabling AI coding capabilities.
- His father's death and the GMI study are tied together in a poignant reflection on legacy and community.
This story is developing. For more on the GMI rural study, see the RGMII pledge page.
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