I have an idea for dealing with a question you badly want to be answered, which no one will answer, even after you've offered a large bounty: cash.

Users can offer cash, and whoever has the accepted answer can be paid, possibly via PayPal.

Does this sound like a good idea?

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26  
Let's try it on this question. How much will you pay me to answer? :) – user27414 Oct 12 '09 at 19:22
I would like to clarify that I am not sure whether it is a good idea. I just want to see what other people think. – mikez302 Oct 12 '09 at 19:23
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Just a note: Downvotes can simply mean someone disapproves of your feature request. – Troggy Oct 12 '09 at 19:30
@Troggy: I think it was suggested on uservoice (probably several times). I don't know if that suggestion was ever migrated here. – Joel Coehoorn Oct 12 '09 at 20:38
Similar questions (but not quite dupes): meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/17900 and meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/14172 – John Rudy Oct 13 '09 at 2:48
@Troggy: The second one's the closest, but I guess if it's a real dupe it's not been migrated here from uservoice. (Not that I ever participated in uservoice ... So I don't know for fact it was there, but I'll readily take Joel Coehoorn's word on that.) – John Rudy Oct 13 '09 at 2:56
meta.witcoin.com is attempting something similar (see bitcoin.org) – ripper234 Mar 24 '11 at 15:38
You could just "donate" to Stack Overflow by sponsoring a tag or placing some advertising. That way you get to spend your money and SO gets some income. – ChrisF Mar 30 '11 at 14:47
The fact this question still doesn't have the status-declined tag makes me wonder... – Cawas Apr 14 '11 at 19:41
What's to say that you actually pay them when you get an answer? – Cole Johnson Apr 18 at 23:19

7 Answers

If I know the answer but am not willing to put the time in to answer your question for free... then I'm probably not gonna do it for $20 either.

But someone will.

Guaranteed, someone, somewhere has time to burn and needs cash. No guarantee they know the answer, mind you... but they'll take a guess at it. And since they really need that $20, they'll likely hang around and down-vote any other answers, while picking fights with anyone who criticizes theirs. Just look at the little fights people get into over rep now, and spice it up with some desperation...

So if you just want answers, and lots of 'em, but don't really care if they actually answer the question... And if you love flame wars... Then yes, this is a great idea.

If you like anything about the way the site works now, then it's a terrible idea.

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That's a valid concern, but it's only an hypothesis. I'm not familiar with any websites when you can offer rewards for crowd-sourced tech advise. Either they tried and failed, in which case you're probably right, or nobody tried. I think bad behavior can be discouraged. You can detect unreasonable down-votes and spamming. – Sjors Provoost Jul 25 '11 at 4:10
Agreed. Despite spending 90% of time writing haskell and reading things about good programming practice, I write shitty code to get a freelance job done. +1 – Dhaivat Pandya Nov 9 '11 at 23:49
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@Sjors: actually, I'm aware of several sites that have tried this. Google Answers was probably one of the larger attempts... That you aren't immediately aware of this speaks to the lack of success they achieved. ;-) – Shog9 Nov 12 '11 at 2:47
I had this idea (question) and after reading this answer, the answer makes so much sense. – TJ- Nov 30 '12 at 9:25
Disagreed. This feature would be used rarely and it would be good because only really important questions people would pay money as bounty. And, if it was made with Bitcoins, it would be even better, because the people could work with less than US$ 0,01. It would be fun, for sure. – Felipe Micaroni Lalli Dec 2 '12 at 19:48

Joel and Jeff talked about this on one of the podcasts... they believe offering financial incentives reinforces the wrong behavior.

People should be motivated to answer questions because they are interested in the field, not because they are offered some money.

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A bit like paying blood donors. – pavium Oct 12 '09 at 23:40
Blood donors get paid? And here all the while in Australia, it's done out of some social good. Pfft. – random Oct 13 '09 at 0:35
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Yeah, people do start a bounty for rare blood groups. I know college students who sell blood once in a while and buys alcohol with the bounty :) – Amarghosh Oct 13 '09 at 9:59
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"they believe offering financial incentives reinforces the wrong behavior." - So... they don't pull a salary/shares from Stack parent company? :) – DVK Mar 22 '10 at 2:37
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Does anyone have a link about this? – Aaron Digulla Jul 21 '10 at 8:40

Yeah, and after you answer, if the person refuses to pay up, Jeff and Joel should have to mediate the dispute. Or, maybe we can just migrate the question to LawyerOverflow?

Sorry, but no...

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I would have suggested illbreakyourkneecapsoverflow.com – user27414 Oct 12 '09 at 19:34
I agree that dispute resolution risks being very expensive. Escrow can solve part of that problem, so does having clear rules about how a question should be phrased and how an answer is considered correct or incorrect (the latter two being useful in a free system too. – Sjors Provoost Jul 25 '11 at 4:18

At that point, why not just post the job on one of the many coder-for-hire sites?

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These sites usually work with a "post job" -> "review candidates" -> "pick candidate" -> "wait for result" -> "pay candidate" workflow and they (at least Elance, $50) have minimum project sizes. A competition system, where the person asking the questions picks the winner (if any), is much more efficient for the person asking the question: "ask question" -> "review answers" -> "pick winner" -> "pay". Reviewing answers is also much faster than reviewing candidates, because others with the same question are helping. – Sjors Provoost Jul 25 '11 at 4:14
Pick winner is a horrible system. Graphic artists are usually subjected to this type of system early on before they get a good portfolio built up. Needless to say, it's resulted in employment abuse and an ever decreasing quality as pay gets less and less and less. Also hurts the economy because if people aren't paid for their attempts, then those people don't spend back into the economy and end up on welfare checks. Great for the person looking to hire (or looking for results), as they get the best possible product. But, eventually it starves the workforce out, and then there's no one to work. – Lee Louviere Jul 11 '12 at 18:24

I think it's a lovely idea and makes sense - from the point of view of the user who's asking a question.

But allow me to sum up what others have pointed: the money would corrupt the community.

Picture an eBay for buying rather than selling. There are actually attempts of doing just that on the web.

Nevertheless, the idea is still in the air for someone to bring a good solution to it. Just not here, please.

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I WILL PAY TO HAVE CERTAIN QUESTIONS OF MINE ANSWERED WHEN ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY! I think this would be great. Why would it be so bad?????

But, to prevent excessive use of this feature, questions can have a minimum price tag, for example say $25. That way people still answer free questions and not every question is a $1 dollar question that forces other good (free) questions to be ignored.

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On a less frequently visited stack exchange site, I asked a question, and put this in as a comment under the question:

0.25 bitcoins to whoever can gets me the best usable answer in the next 2 days. Just put your address in the comment to your answer.

It is totally ad-hoc and left up to my judgement. I probably wouldn't do this in a board where I knew I was going to get an answer anyway in less than a day. Sometimes you need an answer now, and you would be willing to toss in money to get that answer.

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