*(NB: this answer has been reformulated substantially since the initial downvotes)* Stack Exchange sites are not a social network, but they are still a community. Some members of a community are outstanding, leading members, contributing unlike most others. We are honouring such users while alive by reputation, badges, and special posts on meta when they're the first to reach a major milestone. I would like to be part of a community where, if such a user passes away, we take a moment of contemplation in the form of a meta post and put an obituary notice on their user page. For example, see [this user on Christianity SE](https://christianity.stackexchange.com/users/1039/affable-geek) (who still tops the reputation leagues four years after he passed away), also active on other sites on the network. I would find it sad (and frankly disrespectful) if all we can see is that a top user (suddenly) stops contributing, leaving the community to speculate what happened. The large majority of users are unknown to most others, and such a notice would be noise and too much work to maintain (with 10 million users, dozens to hundreds of users die daily). Compare how famous people deaths are announced in the news, not "ordinary" people's death.