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Stack Overflow Blog

Paging Charity! How can engineering leaders avoid becoming Bond villains? Code isn’t the only thing causing your production failures Your AI shipped a backend that boots. That is the whole problem. The 2026 Developer Survey is now open (for human developers only)! Oh the places you’ll go with spatial data Dispatches from O'Reilly: From capabilities to responsibilities You don’t understand DNS like you think you do The new bottleneck - Stack Overflow AI agents are a confused deputy with the keys to your kingdom If context is king, architecture is the castle Selenium vs Cypress vs Playwright: Choosing Your Test Automation Framework AI agents expose the security checks you never actually wrote Designing CherryScript: Optimizing Data-Driven Workflows via Custom Python-Based Interpreters Paging Charity? How do I get my leaders to stop running teams Into the ground? Developers are emotionally attached to their tools When the cost of code approaches zero, what does engineering leadership look like? Announcing Stack Overflow for Agents Creating checkpoints by gaslighting a Postgres database What can 500 years of journalism teach developers about AI trustworthiness? Making the OWASP top ten in the vibe code era What it takes to be a player in the international AI game Best of the Heap: First post of the past The find out stage of AI is just supply chain and password protection In an AI world, the most valuable developers will be both artisans and builders Agents on a leash: Agentic AI remains mostly single-agent and monitored at work Do you have what it takes to run AI in production? Dispatches from O'Reilly: The accidental orchestrator Breaking your AI storage bottlenecks Coding agents are giving everyone decision fatigue Pack your agentic stack in Slack Your fridge could be a threat to national security Interviews aren’t about you (sorry) “You can't vibe code scale”: What the AI hype gets wrong about software engineering No Dumb Questions: What is cloud computing and why is everyone doing it? Observability and human intuition in an AI world How Braze’s CTO is rethinking engineering for the agentic area You shipped it fast. But did you ship it right? Building a Google Drive Sync Engine that Survives MV3 Service Workers Connecting the dots for accurate AI When the Sensor Starts Thinking: SnortML, Agentic AI, and the Evolving Architecture of Intrusion Detection OAuth 2.0 – Device flow explained for Engineers, especially for Backend Engineers Introducing the Heap, the software engineering blog for everyone Compile-Time Map and Compile-Time Mutable Variable with C++26 Reflection No Dumb Questions: What is an MCP server and why do I care? AI giveth and AI taketh CPU How we replaced Ingress-NGINX at Stack Overflow What (un)exactly do you mean by semantic search? Dispatches from O'Reilly: Fast paths and slow paths Time is a construct but it can still break your software The Worst Coder in the World goes agentic: building a leaderboard cracking AI Turning scattered knowledge into trusted intelligence: Stack Internal 2026.3 Your LLM issues are really data issues Welcome to the “find out” stage of AI Lights, camera, open source! - Stack Overflow Black box AI drift: AI tools are making design decisions nobody asked for How to get multiple agents to play nice at scale We still need developer communities No country left behind with sovereign AI Human input needed: take our survey on AI agents Why AI hasn't replaced human expertise—and what that means for your SaaS stack Who needs VCs when you have friends like these? The messy truth of your AI strategies Gen Z needs a knowledge base (and so do you) He designed C++ to solve your code problems Seizing the means of messenger production What the AI trust gap means for enterprise SaaS How can you test your code when you don’t know what’s in it? Prevent agentic identity theft - Stack Overflow Building shared coding guidelines for AI (and people too) Multi-stage attacks are the Final Fantasy bosses of security After all the hype, was 2025 really the year of AI agents? AI is becoming a second brain at the expense of your first one Building a global engineering team (plus AI agents) with Netlify Keeping the lights on for open source Domain expertise still wanted: the latest trends in AI-assisted knowledge for developers Open source for awkward robots The context problem: Why enterprise AI needs more than foundation models Even the chip makers are making LLMs Organizing productive platform teams - Stack Overflow Building brains for bulldozers - Stack Overflow DeveloperWeek 2026: Making AI tools that are actually good AI-assisted coding needs more than vibes; it needs containers and sandboxes No need for Ctrl+C when you have MCP To live in an AI world, knowing is half the battle Beyond block or allow: How pay-per-crawl is reshaping public data monetization Your sneak peek at the redesigned Stack Overflow Dogfood so nutritious it’s building the future of SDLCs Defense against uploads: Q&A with OSS file scanner, pompelmi Even GenAI uses Wikipedia as a source Why Stack Overflow and Cloudflare launched a pay-per-crawl model Mind the gap: Closing the AI trust gap for developers Data is the new oil, and your database is the only way to extract it Even your voice is a data problem How everyone and anyone can use AI for good Is anyone using AI for good? The logos, ethos, and pathos of your LLMs Why demand for code is infinite: How AI creates more developer jobs AI attention span so good it shouldn’t be legal Code smells for AI agents: Q&A with Eno Reyes of Factory Generating text with diffusion (and ROI with LLMs)
What’s new at Stack Overflow: March 2026
2026-03-02 · via Stack Overflow Blog

Welcome to the March recap of what’s new on stackoverflow.com. Explore the redesigned Stack Overflow now available in beta, learn about open-ended questions now available to all users, hear about the community members earning the Populist badge, and catch up on everything else that’s new this month.

We released the beta version of the redesigned Stack Overflow, which updates its look and feel, how people engage on the site, and how content is created and shared. Our goal is to build the space for every technical conversation, centered on real human-to-human connection and powered by AI when it helps most. Learn more about the redesign through this blog post.

No matter if you’ve been on Stack Overflow for over a decade or are brand new, we’d love for you to check out the beta, explore the new experience, and tell us what you think.

For years, Stack Overflow has been the place for a "single right answer." On February 19, 2026, we expanded the opinion-based questions experiment to all users. Now all questions and answers can include experience-based recommendations, insights, and peer perspectives.

This experiment aims to better support how technologists actually work— real-world solutions often require more nuanced information than a single answer. By welcoming more content types, we’re making it easier to ask questions without worrying about the ‘perfect’ formatting and helping technologists find the answers they need faster.

Stay tuned as this experiment continues to develop. Expect to see changes to the UI and guidelines in the coming weeks as we continue to refine the experience.

With the Stack Overflow redesign beta, you can try out AI Assist in the new look and feel. Although you can toggle between the “classic” and beta site, the majority of AI Assist’s most recent changes have only been implemented on the redesigned experience. Some notable updates:

  • Responses are faster and more accurate due to switching over to an agentic RAG infrastructure.
  • Source cards have been moved to the bottom of responses to prioritize the answer.
  • You can now pin, rename, and delete chats.
  • Source card UI has been designed to be more compact and scannable.
  • Feedback flow has been improved to include clearer response handling.
  • The “More from the community” links now display the logos of Stack Exchange sites.

Try out the updates to AI Assist on beta.stackoverflow.com and share feedback or report bugs as we build!

In February, we announced custom badges as part of the last Community Asks Sprint. We rolled out four new custom badges for Challenges on Stack Overflow—three for challenge winners, and one for challenge authors:

Entries that are submitted during the “open” challenge period and have been selected as a winning entry, or “passed” in the case of pass/fail challenges are eligible for the Coder, Hacker, or Virtuoso badges. All users who author challenges, either because staff invited them to contribute one or because their idea was selected from the Challenges Sandbox, will be awarded the Creator badge.

Keep submitting creative and thought-provoking challenge ideas! And don’t forget to participate in the latest challenge.

This month, we want to highlight the Populist badge, which is awarded to users when their answer becomes the highest-scoring answer on a question and outscores an accepted answer (with a score of more than 10) by more than double. This badge can be awarded multiple times.

The Populist badge recognizes users who contribute high-quality content and keeps the library of knowledge up to date. Sometimes, these answers show an alternate approach to solving a problem; other times, they replace earlier solutions that have become outdated as the technology has evolved.

We want to celebrate all 21 community members who earned this badge in February and thank them for their thoroughness and dedication.