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What if I ask a question, but then it draws many answers which I can't figure out? Maybe the answers are too expert for me, I'm simply undecided, or perhaps I am stuck in emergency and cannot get to the question for lack of time.

This is akin to the "Ask the Audience" feature of game show called "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?".

By default, the system breaks up the bounty. But why not allow the user to reward the bounty based on a survey to users? Just a simple survey, not fancy:

Survey Sample

This can be restricted, so that only certain question can be allowed to put a survey. For example, if a question goes viral and attracts many answers.

What do you all think?

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    Cue the complaints, the survey chose me but the OP chose the other answer.
    – Taryn
    Apr 22, 2015 at 19:19
  • First-World-Problem I guess :\ Apr 22, 2015 at 19:20
  • If you are incapable of deciding on the answer which works best for you. who can? If there is a good answer you don't understand but gets UpVotes, those are its own reward. Apr 22, 2015 at 20:09

2 Answers 2

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This functionality already exists. People can vote for which answer they think is the best by clicking on one of these:

enter image description here

It's then up to you whether or not to pick the highest voted answer, or the answer that best helped you solve your problem, and award the bounty to them.

(By the way, you don't have to award the bounty to the selected answer.)

If you choose not to award a bounty manually, the system will automatically give half the bounty to the highest voted answer.

Answer must have been created after the bounty started and have a minimum score of 2.

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By default, the system breaks up the bounty

By default, the bounty is split in half and awarded to whomever received the most upvotes (minimum 2) during its run. This is fair, since if a user offers a bounty of 500 reputation, but no answer is chosen by the offerer, the community can weigh in with their votes.

This system would be incredibly intrusive, because:

  • Like OPs, other answers may not be able to gauge the correctness or feasibility of an answer.
  • There would be intense bickering about why someone didn't get selected via the straw poll.
  • Some questions may not have the eyeballs looking at them often enough to get enough traffic to warrant the poll in the first place.

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