As jbriggs444 and phinds have noted, it's simply not possible to describe the perspective of a thing traveling at the speed of light. Attempting to do so leads to the contradiction I mentioned.
Unfortunately, something you find as you move away from every day experience is that questions that seem perfectly sensible turn out to be nonsense. You don't even have to go that far outside the every day. Could you tell me which way is north where you are now? Could you tell me which way is north if you were at the north pole? Asking what anyone or anything would see at the speed of light is like that second question. You can't answer because the question has hidden assumptions that are not valid in the case it's talking about.
Note that you do find pop-sci sources (notably Brian Greene) that say things like "time stops at the speed of light". They're the result of forcing an answer at (metaphorical, I hope) gunpoint and don't make coherent sense, but usually satisfy non-physicists enough that they shut up and go away. It's worth noting that I gather that Greene himself does not make this claim in professional publications, only his pop-sci stuff.