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I'm looking into the Badge Benefactor:

First bounty you manually awarded on your own question

So I'm wondering: if one cannot get the bounty for himself/herself, how can this happen?


For more, I see four badges about bounty, what's the difference? I'm a bit amazed, please tell.

  1. Altruist: First bounty you manually awarded on another person's question
  2. Benefactor: First bounty you manually awarded on your own question
  3. Investor: First bounty you offered on another person's question
  4. Promoter: First bounty you offered on your own question

2 Answers 2

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You earn the badge by awarding a bounty to an answer on your own question; both the question and the bounty you set on it are your own, but not the answer.

See the central badges FAQ:

Benefactor

  • bronze; awarded once
  • Award a bounty on your own question
    • Awarding means manually selecting a bounty winner; letting the system auto-award half the bounty does not count (source)
  • Not awarded on per-site metas, since those sites do not have bounties

Each of the 4 bounty badges teach you about starting and awarding bounties; two each for bounties on your own and on someone else's question.

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  • I'm amazed about the four badges about bounty, what's the difference? I don't quite catch the meaning. Sep 13, 2014 at 15:41
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    @fish_ball: they teach you about starting and awarding a bounty, both on your own question and on someone else's question.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Sep 13, 2014 at 15:43
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It's not for receiving the bounty. That badge is awarded for you creating a bounty on your own question and then actually giving it to someone, rather than letting Community auto-award it or letting it expire.

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  • I'm amazed about the four badges about bounty, what's the difference? I don't quite catch the meaning. Sep 13, 2014 at 15:41
  • One badge is for creating a bounty on your own question, and one is for creating a bounty on someone else's question. Similarly, one is for awarding said bounty to someone on your own question, and the other is for awarding said bounty on someone else's question.
    – animuson StaffMod
    Sep 13, 2014 at 15:43

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