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Why aren't bounties refunded if they are not awarded?

Why do we lose the rep when placing a bounty on a question before we get any answers? Jabba didn't lose any money he put on Han Solo's head until he got his prize. Same with Vader when he was hunting down the Millennium Falcon.

It seems odd that we lose rep for questions that may not get any answers. Is there a reason for this?

Ive also seen some posts about bounty refunds in Meta but couldnt find any solid discussion on it. Is it real?

For us low rep'ers giving up 50 points is a lot when you only have 600, I'd rather leave a question unanswered in they abyss than gamble with my rep.

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Jabba the Hut holds people for ransom, we don't. – Martijn Pieters Sep 13 '12 at 15:08
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You're not paying the rep for answers, you pay it for visibility. – TinSoldiersAndNixonsComin' Sep 13 '12 at 15:09
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"I'd rather leave a question unanswered in they abyss than gamble with my rep." Then obviously you don't want the benefits of the bounty that badly. – Nicol Bolas Sep 13 '12 at 15:10
@NicolBolas - Not true, but I have to work hard for my rep, I only put bounties on the questions I REALLY need answers for, typically not easy questions that dont have immediately easy answers. Since reputation is something that potential employers see I definitely do not want to give that up for a question that has already been unanswered and will likely remain so after a bounty. – ProfessionalAmateur Sep 13 '12 at 15:14
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I would not like to compare myself to a huge slug with Leia in a chainmail bikini... No, wait... – Fluffeh Sep 13 '12 at 15:27
For that matter, it's spelled Hutt. edit that was quick – BoltClock's a Unicorn Sep 13 '12 at 15:42
@BoltClock'saUnicorn - I think I saw your comment right when you hit enter. Pizza Hut, Jabba The Hutt. I always mix them up. – ProfessionalAmateur Sep 13 '12 at 15:46
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@ProfessionalAmateur: I think you meant Pizza the Hutt. – Dennis Sep 13 '12 at 16:00
Bounty hunters... we don't need their scum. – Tudor Sep 13 '12 at 17:15

marked as duplicate by Dennis, Toon Krijthe, jonsca, Bo Persson, Jim Sep 13 '12 at 16:39

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4 Answers

up vote 23 down vote accepted

Rather than an actual bounty, think of Stack Overflow's bounties as advertising:

By placing a bounty, you pay to get a lot more attention to your question. Whether it helped (i.e., you got an answer) or not, you got what you paid for.

If you advertise in a newspaper, you also won't get a refund if nobody acted on your ad...

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That does make sense. Bounty is probably a poorly chosen term for it then? – ProfessionalAmateur Sep 13 '12 at 15:14
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Maybe so, but I can't think of a better word for it. Any term related to advertising disregards the fact that you can award the spent reputation to an answerer. – Dennis Sep 13 '12 at 15:24
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Bonus might be a better way to describe it, but I think that loses some context too. – Aaron Bertrand Sep 13 '12 at 15:28
@AaronBertrand: Maybe contest or competition. Unlike bounties, it's not uncommon in a contest that the prize money gets donated to charity if there's no winner. – Dennis Sep 13 '12 at 15:37

It seems odd that we lose rep for questions that may not get any answers. Is there a reason for this?

Sure. The system is designed to work without bounties. You can completely ignore the existence of a "bounty" feature and do just fine. Folks really, really wanted some sort of avenue to "sweeten the deal" on particularly difficult, obscure, or overlooked questions, and so the bounty system was added to sate that desire - but it's still completely optional, and I'm strongly against any change that would make it more integral to the process of asking and answering, or even more enticing for people who haven't exhausted every other avenue. If you don't like the way it works, don't use it - you'll do just fine without it.

The venerable How do I get attention for old, unanswered questions? FAQ contains two suggestions for garnering attention... And the primary suggestion is editing. Which is free.

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Of course the system us designed to work without bounties, but it was also designed for bounties, hence the reason it exists.I was just mislead by the definition of bounty on SE sites. I took the definition as "Bounty (reward), an amount of money or other reward offered by an organization for the capture of a person or thing" Not as payment for higher page rank and visibility. That's all. – ProfessionalAmateur Sep 13 '12 at 15:50

You've apparently mistaken Stack Exchange for a game...it is not. Stack Exchange is a question and answer site which seeks to provide great answers to your questions. If you are more worried about your reputation than your question, then your question is not worth being posted on Stack Exchange.

If you really wanted an answer to your question, you would apply the bounty.

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Potential employers may view you on SO and look at rep as a gauge to your potential, its not a game but definitely more like currency. I have a tough time gambling in that sense. – ProfessionalAmateur Sep 13 '12 at 15:16
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@ProfessionalAmateur: if you don't want answers because you're worried about reputation, you're more than welcome to let a question just hang out...but I guarantee you'll get more reputation in the long run if you just forget about it and ask great questions and give great answers. – sixlettervariables Sep 13 '12 at 15:18
Heh, "Great Questions" Im sure is relative to the eyes of the person asking. The ones I put bounties one I def need answers for. Ive done it in the past and just burnt the rep, visibility or not it didn't pan out for me. I saw the definition of bounty as different than what it really means on SO before your explanation is all I guess. No worries. – ProfessionalAmateur Sep 13 '12 at 15:21
Strange. I sure do have a lot of fun asking/answering questions on this non-game. – John Sep 13 '12 at 16:23

You lose the rep immediately because there's a chance you'd otherwise lose it by getting down voted and then couldn't pay up when someone gets the right answer.

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