In the past this has been possible.
For a day - please bring it back for those that have been killed by hatred in America.
In the past this has been possible.
For a day - please bring it back for those that have been killed by hatred in America.
I don't think this should happen for two reasons:
1) There was a lot of backlash the last time they changed to a rainbow logo, no matter how temporary it was. A large part of this seemed to be from people who saw it as completely unnecessary, given that the issue was in no way related to programming. For examples of backlash, see the question about the policy of changing the logo and the comments posted there, along with the discussion about the license also brought up as a result of the change.
2) More importantly, there has not been a logo change for other, larger attacks in other countries recently. People will start arguing that other attacks should be honored this way, past and future.
Unfortunately, another attack is bound to happen somewhere in the world in the next 6 months. (If I'm wrong and it takes longer, I will be glad to be wrong.) If Stack Overflow honors this attack with a logo or other site change, it will set a precedent that may eventually have the logo or site changing weekly or monthly, probably even daily. (I pray it never comes to this.)
I'm all for honoring the victims. It's a tragedy what happened, and I will never argue against that. This answer is in no way intended to say otherwise. But it'll cause more strife than anything on Stack Overflow (and Meta Stack Overflow) if the logo is changed for so much as a day. We need to find other ways to honor these victims, ways that won't cause disagreements or grief.
One alternative is that interested users could choose to change their profile images in support of the victims. In this way, the individual users get to decide what their message is and how it's conveyed. The "About Me" section is also useful for this purpose. Individuals honoring the victims of select events will go over far better than the team deciding to force the message of honor on everyone.