Given the big and prominent "powered by indeed" label at the top of the page and the lack of a StackOverflow-specific candidate profile, I guess this is just a paid collaboration (similarly to those with Google and OpenAI), so the motivation is probably money, not to help the community.
In the post about the sunsetting of the old Jobs, which got a lot of downvotes and negative feedback from the community, it was already evident that a reason, or the reason, for the sunsetting of Jobs was money, or lack thereof (bold is mine):
Why?
[...]
While Talent & Jobs helped us get to where we are over the past decade, the talent acquisition space is not one where we have a strong competitive advantage. Developers, as you all know, don’t have a hard time finding job opportunities. The problem is often finding the right opportunity and job boards and sourcing are ineffective solutions. The effort it would take us to truly differentiate in this space is not one we could justify.
— I guess they are referring to financial effort here.
Also, this new Jobs doesn't seem to do anything remotely similar to the old Jobs:
Huge list of low-quality job posts, rather than a smaller and highly curated list of quality jobs and companies.
No job recommendations based on your activity and preferences on StackOverflow, such as "Watched Tags".
Requires you to create an Indeed account rather than using your StackOverflow one. Also, Indeed has no integration with your StackOverflow profile. It's exactly the same as navigating to Indeed on your own and creating a new account.
Given the lack of a proper integration, this probably has no advantage for the candidate either. With the old Jobs, your StackOverflow answers could be used to highlight your knowledge about certain technologies and/or make it stand out.
jobs/dev-story
was shutdown, a lot of us downvoted that: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/415293/… ... while the new "replacement" is crappy now, we can only hope they will bring back the best of the old version into this new stuff