# r/programming banned LLM posts. 6.9 million devs just exhaled.

> Source: <https://dev.to/adioof/rprogramming-banned-llm-posts-69-million-devs-just-exhaled-3cnk>
> Published: 2026-06-27 13:10:19+00:00

The biggest programming subreddit just temporarily banned all LLM-related posts. 6.9 million developers didn't protest. They *thanked the mods*.

The reaction speaks for itself.

The moderators were direct about it. They mentioned the volume, the quality collapse, and their own exhaustion as reasons. Every other post had become “I asked ChatGPT to build X” or “Why AI will replace your job in 18 months.”

The comments were full of repeating the same things over and over. Nobody was learning anything new. They were just stuck.

This is the statistic that I can't get out of my head: **84% of developers are using or intending to use AI tools, while only 3% have a high level of trust in the results.**

Read that again. We're all using the thing. Almost none of us believe it. That's not adoption — that's compulsion.

The content flooding the programming communities followed a similar pattern:

→ Hot take about AI replacing developers

→ Tutorial that's basically "paste this into ChatGPT"

→ Thought piece predicting the future with zero evidence

→ Repeat, daily, forever

None of it served a *purpose*. It was information on information on information. A snake eating its own tail while writing a blog post about it.

For some individuals, this is being presented as resistance to progress. "You can't just ignore AI!" Sure. You also can't ignore a fire alarm, but you don't want it going off every thirty seconds when there's no fire.

The signal-to-noise ratio became so low that real programming discussions – algorithms, performance, debugging stories – were being drowned in a sea of AI hype. The ban is not about sticking our heads in the sand. It’s about trying to keep a space where people still talk about code.

Think about it. When's the last time you read an AI-in-programming post and genuinely changed how you work? Not felt vaguely anxious. Not bookmarked it and never returned. Actually *changed something*.

AI content is easy to produce. It gets clicks. It triggers emotions — fear, excitement, outrage. That's a perfect storm for flooding any community.

At the same time, a well-thought-out post you write on database indexing strategies in hours will get a tiny fraction of the engagement. Something is broken in the system.

This is what happens when platforms optimize for volume over value. Those who provide real value disengage, while the noisy ones who may not contribute constructively stay. It's a vicious circle until drastic measures are taken. And eventually someone has to pull the emergency brake.

A 6.9-million-member community doesn't make this decision lightly. When they make such a decision, it is for a good reason:

→ **Developers are fatigued**, not excited, by the AI content cycle

→ **Quality still matters** more than hype to working programmers

→ **Community trust is fragile** — flood it with noise and people check out

I think we'll see more communities follow. Not because they're anti-AI, but because they're pro-signal. The developers who actually build things need spaces where "I shipped this" matters more than "AI will ship this for you someday." 🔧

The ban holds up a mirror. It shows what millions of developers have tried to say but couldn’t find the words for. “We’re tired of hearing about AI and would like to go back to our programming now.” The irony of my writing that in an AI-adjacent post is not lost on me. But sometimes you just need to identify what it is to be able to turn the damn thing off.

So here's my question: **Has the flood of AI content in developer communities made you smarter, or just more anxious?** I have a feeling I know which way this one leans. 💬
