This question (NOT MINE) was (and still is) unanswered, so I placed a bounty on it.
When the bounty was very near to its expiration, somebody published a random garbage answer which not only does not answer, but doesn't even remotely address the question.
It's pretty clear that he did that in order to get 25 reputation points for nothing. That's what I call a "bounty troll".
I don't care about the reputation that I wasted, nor do I care about him getting reputation for a garbage answer. It does bother me that the bounty mechanism, which is supposed to be a tool for improving the quality of SO as a source of information, is so easily perverted to obtain the exact opposite effect: what previously was a valuable, unfortunately unanswered question which deserved more attention, now is an unanswered question with a garbage answer which, by the way, is wrongly implicitly signaled as the accepted answer. This is worse than no answer, because
- people will waste time reading the non-answer
- the question will receive even less attention because it appears to have already an accepted answer
- (not sure about this one) it may even get boosts in search results leading to more people looking for an answer ending up wasting their time reading garbage.
To me it's obvious what SO should do to prevent these situations which degrade the quality of SO:
1) Raise the threshold
If you do not award [...] the highest voted answer [...] with a minimum score of 2 will be awarded half the bounty amount.
The current score threshold of 2 is ridiculously low. My question is the proof that even a garbage answer that cites some random piece of documentation remotely related to the subject of the answer can achieve a score of 2.
2) Don't mark the awarded answer as accepted
Leave the empty checksign that non-accepted answers usually have. An answer that has been automatically awarded a bounty is not an accepted answer
Unless you may want to just remove the auto-awarding mechanism altogether, which is very questionable in the first place.