I'm not a "career expert" but I do play one on TV.
Ok, I'll be serious now. I make hiring decisions. If someone mentions their participation to Stack Overflow (or any SE site, or any other site for that matter), that's good to know. I'll want to check how they act on the site, and depending on what I see the outcome could be a plus or a minus.
If someone lists their participation to Stack Overflow as "volunteering", that will earn a smirk from me. My immediate reaction is going to be that the person who describes their activity on SO as "volunteering" is really grasping at straws, unless they happen to be doing something which is really out of the ordinary on SO. Being a moderator, for instance, would qualify, because AFAIK moderators are pledging their time to the site. There's a certain formality to being a moderator that does not exist when someone just happens to be active on the site. (I don't always agree with the moderators, but hats off to the willingness to put up with the flow of crap that is thrown at SO on a daily basis.)
Also, the kind of activity matters. It is great if someone is active at answering questions. But as I see it, the selflessness that is often associated with volunteering is manifested more in those actions that do not give a direct benefit (i.e. reputation for the individual) like closing questions that need closing, participating in the review queues, editing, and flagging what needs flagging. So if for instance a candidate says they volunteer on SO and I go check their profile and find that in 3 years, they've got 5 reviews, 3 edits, and 9 flags, then they'll get a smirk first and a frown next, because that does not look like "volunteering" to me. (Yes, I know people can have an account on SO for years before they become "active". I've just chosen an easy example.)
But that's just me.