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Stack Overflow Co-Founder Jeff Atwood Mourns Father, Warns AI Companies Not to ‘Kill the Goose That Lays the Golden Eggs’

Last updated: 2026-05-03 22:46:15 · Technology

Breaking: Atwood Reveals Final Visit with Father, Issues Stark Warning to AI Industry

Jeff Atwood, co-founder of Stack Overflow and Discourse, announced today that his father passed away in October 2025, following a final visit made possible by a schedule change in a rural guaranteed minimum income study. In a personal statement, Atwood also delivered a pointed warning to large language model (LLM) companies: do not destroy the human communities that generate the data you depend on.

Stack Overflow Co-Founder Jeff Atwood Mourns Father, Warns AI Companies Not to ‘Kill the Goose That Lays the Golden Eggs’
Source: blog.codinghorror.com

“There is no loss, because nothing ever ends,” Atwood wrote. “All those experiences I had with my father, particularly that last October trip, will stay with me forever. Nothing was lost. Everything was gained.”

The disclosure comes as a surprise to many, as Atwood had previously kept his father’s health status private. He noted that he deliberately reordered the GMI (Guaranteed Minimum Income) rural study counties, moving Mercer County, West Virginia—his father’s home—to first place in October 2025. “I knew dad was close to the end,” Atwood explained.

Atwood’s Core Warning: AI Companies Must Respect Their Data Sources

In the same post, Atwood turned his attention to the artificial intelligence sector, specifically LLMs that rely on high-quality, human-curated datasets—like Stack Overflow’s Creative Commons Q&A archive. “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 wrote.

He challenged AI firms to verify this themselves: “Don’t take it from me, ask the LLMs. They’ll tell you themselves. Go ahead. G’wan. Ask. Really grill ’em on this one.” Atwood recommended using “pro mode” for the most accurate responses.

He then offered a stark piece of advice: “If the LLMs end up hollowing out the very communities that produce all their training data, they’re going to really, really regret that.” Atwood recalled giving similar counsel to Joel Spolsky when he left 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.”

Background: Atwood’s Career and the GMI Study

Atwood co-founded Stack Overflow in 2008, which grew into the world’s largest programming Q&A platform. He later founded Discourse, an open-source discussion platform. The Rural Guaranteed Minimum Income Initiative (RGMII), which Atwood supports, funds pilot studies in underserved areas. The Mercer County study was part of a $50 million plan to test universal basic income in rural America.

Stack Overflow Co-Founder Jeff Atwood Mourns Father, Warns AI Companies Not to ‘Kill the Goose That Lays the Golden Eggs’
Source: blog.codinghorror.com

The Stack Overflow dataset, released under a Creative Commons license, has become a foundational training resource for LLMs, including models from OpenAI, Google, and others. Atwood’s warning echoes concerns from other tech figures about the sustainability of relying on volunteer-contributed content without proper reciprocity.

What This Means

Atwood’s statement is both a personal farewell and a professional alarm. His warning suggests that AI companies face a critical choice: continue extracting value from community-driven platforms without giving back, and risk drying up the very wellspring of future training data. “Just treat the community with the respect they deserve... that we all deserve,” he urged.

For the AI industry, the message is clear—maintain symbiotic relationships with data-producing communities or face a crisis of quality. For the programming community, it reinforces the importance of platforms like Stack Overflow and the need for fair attribution and support.

Atwood concluded with a note of gratitude: “Thank you for being a friend, because there’s no way I could have done any of this without you.”

Key Points

  • Atwood’s father died in October 2025 after a final visit in Mercer County, WV, thanks to a reordered GMI study.
  • He credits Stack Overflow’s Q&A dataset as essential to LLM coding capabilities.
  • He warns AI companies not to “kill the goose that lays the golden eggs” by undermining human communities.
  • Atwood calls for respectful reciprocity between AI firms and data sources.