For the record, the graph shows that regarding the number of Qs asked on SO, that number has "gone flat", ie growth has stopped. The OP asks:
- "What would be a good explanation of this?"
Answer: it is absolutely impossible to truly know that. This is precisely in the category of question of "why did the Dow Jones drop last week?" or "Why has Walmart grown and Sears has shrunk?" or "Why did Apple lose half their market share to Samsung?" or "Why has the oil price dropped recently?" It is
absolutely impossible
to "really" answer such questions.
Point: it is possible there is some simple, obvious, secular explanation for the specific change in the graph at that specific time. For example, it could be that (purely an example) on that day a new feature was introduced that eliminates Spanish language questions: in that case it would be utterly reasonable to say "oh there's a specific secular explanation". It would seem there is not such a specific secular explanation because nobody has given one here. So we can set aside a secular explanation (unless someone here has an "ah ha" moment and suddenly realises something dramatically changed on that time), and we can copy and paste ourselves and state, again, with total confidence that: It is
absolutely impossible
to "really" answer such questions". (Such questions as "why did the Dow Jones drop last week?" or "Why has Walmart grown and Sears has shrunk?" or "Why did Apple lose half their market share to Samsung?" or "Why has the oil price dropped recently?" or "Why has SO's growth in questions-aksed ended?")
HOWEVER,
There is an absolutely critical observation to be made here.
It is this dead simple:
• every single (no exceptions) dotcom, which has existed so far, has had a phase of growth of metrics (such as "posts made" or "reviews posted" or "users joined"), and then, that growth phase has ended at some particular point in time.
Note that this is so absolutely and utterly normal ("every time so far") a part of the dotcom business, that, it's an utterly normal thing one talks about in relation to dotcoms. When will the growth phase end, do you guess we're at the end of the growth phase here, what do you think is better, the pre- or post- sellout, and so on.
Indeed it would be astoundingly and wholly remarkable if, SE was the known universe's first dotcom, where, the growth phase has not ended. SO's "run" before the growth phase ended (what was it - 6 years? the wholly useless charts above do not have years indicated on the X axis) is utterly typical and unsurprising.
The only "answer" to your question here, is, that the question is somewhat misguided. All you are saying is "Oh, look at that, as it turned out SO's growth phase lasted X months (80 .. whatever) and it ended in spring of 2014 (whatever)"
Then regarding that observation, you're saying ....... what?
You could comment on it in different ways like "that seems typical" or "Huh - imagine!" or "Man they are taking a risk going for a sellout after rather than before the growth-end" or "what a nice run it was" ... or whatever.
And - by all means - with these "metrics" you can and should certainly look at others: so, things like "ah hah! but if we look at comments made, it's still solidly in the growth phase!" ... or whatever. Do that.
Finally, as mentioned: SE, like Google, is an advertising business. If you're thinking of it more "as a business", then, trivially and obviously, one would look at ad revenues, and see whether that is still in the growth phase; that's more of the "real" metric. (The "other" metrics are just what analysts use to guess what will happen to the actual measure (ie, money) of the business.)