The reason such a term does not exist is because using Stack Overflow is not something that makes up part of our identity.
There are names for people who live in or were born in Germany, for example, because this is an important part of their identity. They have a meaningful group identity, so we can and do refer to them collectively as Germans. Sometimes these exist for other, lower-level locations as well, like cities and towns. Residents of Chicago might identify as Chicagoan. Sociologically, these are called demonyms.
There are also terms that refer to people's occupation/profession, like "doctor," "lawyer," and "programmer." Since people are often grouped together (I hesitate to say united) by their work, the same terms are used for all practitioners of the craft. We are all programmers. By extension, similar terms have been coined to refer to fanatics or devotees of a particular hobby, like Trekkies (fans of Star Trek). Or "bloggers."
People who use a website on the Internet do not generally define their identity around that site, so there is no collective term to refer to them. (For those few who do define their identity around a website, well, we prefer not to encourage them.)
"Users" is the correct word, but when not used in context, it needs a bit of extra qualification: "Stack Overflow users" or "users of Stack Overflow" are both appropriate. If you don't like the term users, you could also call us "contributors." If you want to be even more specific, you can refer to an action: "askers" and "answerers" both exist on this site.