Rumor: Anthropic is going to buy Atlassian?

SilverElfin 21 points 22 comments April 20, 2026
old.reddit.com · View on Hacker News

Discussion Highlights (15 comments)

yshamrei

I can’t even imagine why Anthropic would need Atlassian. Atlassian doesn’t even have an MCP server built in—you have to set up an external one. And Anthropic could build something just as good using its own tool with blackjack and hookers. (In fact, forget the park!(с))

jnwatson

But what value could this possibly be to Anthropic? I'm usually the last one to suggest that you can vibe code a SaaS clone, but this is an exception. JIRA clone is generic enough that it might even be a good agent benchmark.

mandevil

Interesting to see if Claude Code gets a lot better with a complete set of all jira tickets along with the integration to see the associated actual PR's, the linking of issues... it would depend on who owns the Atlassian data, of course. But that could be the last best set of programming data out there, if you had the complete Atlassian cloud-hosted archives.

atonse

Eh I don't see how this makes any sense. It's a huge corporation built on a legacy app that's just been near impossible to modernize despite their best efforts, what's the benefit? My guess is that Atlassian is getting ready to just ditch Rovo and make a big push to embed Claude maybe?

brikym

Some disgruntled Atlassian employee wants his stocks to be more valuable despite the SLT dumping millions per day.

glerk

I'd buy the business book, and keep some of the staff for the expertise, but scrap that horrible product and rebuild it from scratch.

tailscaler2026

why buy? mythos can find some exploits and exfiltrate all the customer data for free.

frays

Anthropic's current valuation is $800 billion. Atlassian's is $19 billion. Is Anthropic really worth 40x Atlassian? If so, is it worth them spending just 2.5% of their valuation to acquire Atlassian's 300,000 enterprise customers? I would be very bullish if this were to happen.

SilverElfin

Related front page discussion about Atlassian changing their data policies to train on customers’ data: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47833247 There have been rumors all over social media that the exits from Atlassian’s C suite (allegedly firings) and this aggressive privacy violating change are all because their stock is down 80% and they’re trying to find the most valuable path to selling the company.

mike_d

Assuming this isn't just trolling what is the value? Atlassian's codebase is full of security and performance bugs, and I don't think anyone could make the argument with a straight face that JIRA is a source of high quality training data. The only thing I could think of is getting a sales foothold into Fortune 500 companies. "We see you have 1,744 man-years of outstanding bugs, want us to just boil a small lake and replace your dev team?"

Starman_Jones

Jira/Confluence with Claude would actually be pretty nice. Jira’s current AI tool has not once done what I asked, and it usually does it wrong in soul-crushing ways. “Oh, no, I’ve decided I can’t create new tickets. Better change the titles of most recent existing tickets and call it a day.”

nrawe

My pet theory here is that Anthropic wants to be the end-to-end system for all software delivery on the web, with its model firmly at the centre of that universe. I have seen posts (but not confirmed) that as part of their recent breach was part of a Vercel-like clone. From that POV, Atlassian could be useful for a few reasons: 1. Data, forget Jira tickets, but Confluence and Service Desk could be valuable for requirements shaping on the model. 2. Customers, as it's easy NRR to include on their balance sheet and would help with an IPO. 3. Infra, Atlassian has been remarkably stable for the last few years (in my region at least) while Anthropic have been suffering, maybe there's some ops acquihire advantage. For the love of god, don't be true, though.

chancitag

At a previous job I had a hiccup onboarding to Atlassian. The startup founder sent initial invite to college email address, and then when we got our own domain and corporate email addresses everyone migrated their accounts over. Except me. Whenever I would try the process would fail. Eventually a human at Atlassian manually migrated me and lamented that their codebase was so labyrinthine and crusty that the bug would never be fixed. Initially I wanted to write this comment saying buying them would be a bad idea just for the technical debt... But maybe they have the perfect "already vibe coded by humans" software to have an AI company take over.

tatersolid

Jira is justifiably derided, but Bamboo was truly Atlassian’s entry into the worst software of all time derby. Basically a random event generator masquerading as a CI/CD system. Not sure what the appeal is for Anthropic.

louiereederson

That Reddit account is only 3 days old and this is their only post so probably not credible. This would have strategic merit as noted already, but seems difficult to justify for Anthropic as a private company given they are horribly computer constrained and have more pressing needs for cash. It could be possible if/when they IPO though.

Semantic search powered by Rivestack pgvector
5,126 stories · 48,318 chunks indexed