CoPilot and ChatGPT gain traction as Stack Overflow falters

Share post:

OpenAI’s ChatGPT and CoPilot, a coding assistant developed by Microsoft’s GitHub, have seen a significant increase in traffic, while Stack Overflow, the go-to site for developers seeking code answers, has seen a continuous fall in its user base.

Stack Overflow has traditionally depended on its dynamic community members to provide various answers, engage in arguments, and vote for the most successful code solutions. However, traffic to Stack Overflow’s community website has been declining since 2022. This drop may be linked, at least in part, to the emergence of CoPilot, which, like ChatGPT, uses the OpenAI large language model and can analyze both human and programming languages.

Stack Overflow’s traffic has been declining at a rate of 6% each month since January 2022, with a major 13.9% dip in March. ChatGPT, on the other hand, has evolved as a dominant digital property, exceeding Microsoft’s Bing search engine in terms of worldwide traffic.

GitHub has seen tremendous growth as well, with traffic to their website (github.com) jumping by 26.4% year on year in March, reaching 524 million visits. GitHub’s growth is undoubtedly affected by its embrace of OpenAI technology, which has generated significant attention in the developer community.

Stack Overflow implemented a temporary ban on ChatGPT-generated content in reaction to the rising prominence of such content on their platform, citing breaches of community rules.

The sources for this piece include an article in Similarweb.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

Research Raises Concerns Over AI Impact on Code Quality

Recent findings from GitClear, a developer analytics firm, indicate that the increasing reliance on AI assistance in software...

Microsoft to train 100,000 Indian developers in AI

Microsoft has launched an ambitious program called "AI Odyssey" to train 100,000 Indian developers in artificial intelligence by...

NIST issues cybersecurity guide for AI developers

Paper identifies the types of cyberattacks that can manipulate the behavior of artificial intelligen

Canada, U.S. sign international guidelines for safe AI development

Eighteen countries, including Canada, the U.S. and the U.K., today agreed on recommended guidelines to developers in their nations for the secure design, development, deployment, and operation of artificial intelligent systems. It’s the latest in a series of voluntary guardrails that nations are urging their public and private sectors to follow for overseeing AI in

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways