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I was browsing the featured questions and came across this question which caught my attention as a moderator (Brad Larson) had removed an answer made by the OP which was an attempt award the bounty back to the OP (which doesn't seem like something that would be allowed - I don't know all the rules regarding bounties so I could be wrong on this).

Out of curiosity I took a look at the edit history and it shows that the OP has changed the question content completely after attaching the bounty, making it a new question - or at least that's what it looks like to me. Worth noting is that a moderator had already reverted it one time.

Is this acceptable behavior?

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    "Is changing a question [snip] acceptable?" if its to clarificate it, remove irrelevant parts or expand/add information, yes, its in any circumstance
    – Braiam
    Aug 15, 2015 at 2:24
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    Since the question was brought up - no, trying to award yourself your own bounty just doesn't work. Aug 15, 2015 at 2:26
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    @DrewDormann I suspected that was the case, thanks for clarifying it.
    – jpw
    Aug 15, 2015 at 2:30
  • @Braiam Sure, that should of course be ok, but it wasn't the kind of edit I meant; I guess my question was a bit ambiguous.
    – jpw
    Aug 15, 2015 at 2:32
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    Well, he didn't change the question to award himself the bounty. The somewhat likelier explanation is that he did this to work around a question ban. Aug 15, 2015 at 10:49
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    @Braiam: Or fixate the spellification. Aug 16, 2015 at 19:24
  • Unless I'm mistaken, there should be no way to award yourself bounty? So I'm unsure what the possible gains of doing this could be. Aug 16, 2015 at 19:56
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    @ClausJørgensen I would assume that the possible gain would be to "reuse" the already spent bounty for another question by changing the question text instead of losing the bounty and post a new question (and possibly attach a new bounty). That's just my guess though.
    – jpw
    Aug 16, 2015 at 20:07

2 Answers 2

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Is this acceptable behavior?

No. It's a foolish and failed attempt to game the system.

The OP tried to change a question to something that they could then answer - so they could award themselves their own bounty.

It is correct to roll back these clearly-wrong edits to a bountied question.

As mentioned in my comment above, these attempts will fail for this very reason. Bounties would not work if you could attract all the attention and then hand the reputation back to yourself.

I have again reverted the question.

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    I disagree. There's no answers posted (other than the one by the OP which was deleted), so there's nothing to be invalidated by the question being changed completely. Community consensus is, as far as I'm aware, that completely changing a question that has no answers is perfectly acceptable; I don't see why having attached a bounty changes that. Aug 17, 2015 at 12:08
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    @AnthonyGrist: Where do you find that consensus? The only consensus in that direction is not rolling back if the change didn't invalidate answers but a rollback would. Otherwise, support is fairly solid for rolling back. Aug 17, 2015 at 21:35
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    @Deduplicator It's entirely possible I'm misremembering, and I can't seem to find the post, so we'll assume I'm incorrect. Aug 18, 2015 at 9:34
  • @AnthonyGrist I remember a blog post from either JoelOnSoftware or CodingHorror that supports your notion that if OP starts an edit war, one should just let them do it and walk away. I've edited my answer to make it more prominent that it is about questions with a bounty - since altering the meaning of those posts present vectors for bounty abuse. Aug 18, 2015 at 15:02
  • @DrewDormann The policy is that if the OP starts an edit war that you flag for a mod to resolve the issue and then walk away because it's a problem that you can't solve, not that it isn't a problem at all. The mod can then roll back the OP's edit and, if they feel its necessary, lock the post to prevent them from editing it again.
    – Servy
    Aug 18, 2015 at 15:57
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What the user is trying to do doesn't work anyway. The system prevents bounties from being awarded back to the person who set the bounty.

I'm not sure what the point is in rolling back the edits. The user might learn more if he experienced the system not awarding him his own bounty even though he made the edits.

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