Consider this Stack Overflow question:
How to use #include directive correctly?
The accepted answer is by the null user. Is this common?
Consider this Stack Overflow question:
How to use #include directive correctly?
The accepted answer is by the null user. Is this common?
Grayed out users like your example appear when the post owner does not have an account. This happens in 3 cases:
When migrating, the user name is not anonymized so you will see the display name from the original site. When deleted , the display name is automatically anonymized prior to deletion, so it would be replaced by userXXXXXX
(where XXXXXX is the former user id number for the user). I can't actually recall exactly how a disassociated post is anonymized but it does not make sense to use the specific user id.
However, in the early days, user names were not automatically anonymized prior to the account deletion and the name that was left on the content was the last display name the user used. That is most likely what happened here as the question in question was not migrated from another site. A user with the name null
answered that question and then later deleted his/her account.
My understanding is users did sometimes manually anonymized their account before deletion, as recommended by Jeff, so they could have manually changed their name to null
first then requested deletion of the account in order to disassociate themselves from the content after the account was deleted.
To address your specific question, "null" isn't anything specific, just what the user's name was at the time of account deletion. It could have been changed to anything. But content with deleted owners is quite common. My SQL and knowledge of the fields in the data dump are not up to the task, but I believe you can find a good idea in a Data Explorer Query