I don't want that default to be visible to anybody but me. I just want to set who gets the bounty when it expires if I don't change my mind. Currently the system picks a winner if you don't pick one based on some criteria that makes sense, but can also result in the wrong person getting it.

Bounties are basically an auction. You are offering up a certain number of points to award a response. You want to award those points to the best response (offer) before the time expires.

So, given that they are an auction, I would like a way to nominate the highest bidder at any given point in time. This saves me from having to go back just before the bounty expires and picking the best answer available. I can then change who I've nominated at any time before the bounty expires.

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I forsee a lot of "Hey, I only meant to award that provisionally, now I can't take it back even though a better answer came along!" MSO posts. – Popular Demand Nov 6 '10 at 21:23
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@Popular Demand - What's the difference between those and "It auto-awarded the bounty to an answer I didn't like, how do I fix it?" posts? – Omnifarious Nov 6 '10 at 21:25
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2 Answers

This would probably cause a massive amount of confusion, users would have huge difficulties understanding the difference between "provisional" and "award".

I think it is not much of a big ask for the person awarding the bounty, to revisit the question on day 7, read through the comments and answers and make a call.

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Wow. Users must be pretty stupid. – aaronasterling Nov 6 '10 at 21:54
@aaronasterling keep in mind Stack Exchange is not only targeted at the technically savvy , complexity is our enemy – waffles Nov 8 '10 at 0:45
Do you think that the new wording of 'default' instead of 'provisional' makes it simpler? It's two less syllables and so probably 4 times as likely to be understood. Also, it strikes me as more of a conceptual issue than a technical one. – aaronasterling Nov 8 '10 at 12:44
@aaronasterling: the trick is that users of software (ourselves included) don't try to fully understand something before using it -- they're quite task-oriented, so something that looks like what they want but isn't can be a big problem. In this case it's probably not a big deal, mostly because the eventual outcome of the "default" choice is very similar to the immediate outcome of the "award" choice. – theazureshadow Aug 11 '11 at 3:53
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You can always promise to set a bounty of a certain size for a usable answer to your question.

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But then the question doesn't show up on the 'featured questions' list, which is one of the main reasons to award a bounty. – Omnifarious Nov 7 '10 at 0:44
@Omnifarious well, you can't have the cake and eat it, too. You can start a bounty and award it to an answer of your own. If none of the answers is satisfactory, that is perfectly acceptable practice. You lose the reputation either way - look at it as the price for the increased attention your question received – Pekka Nov 7 '10 at 8:30
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@Pekka - I don't understand. I don't expect any points back or anything. I just want to set who will get the bounty when the time expires instead of having the system choose based on whatever criteria it uses. This lets me pick the current 'winning' question and then change my mind later if someone gives a new answer that's better, at least if they give it before the bounty expires. – Omnifarious Nov 7 '10 at 12:28
@Omnifarious ahh, I see! But then you should reword your question accordingly: What you want to do is just select a default "winner" for the auto-accept mechanism. A good idea, +1. – Pekka Nov 7 '10 at 12:32
@Pekka - Well, I made the attempt. I hope the new wording is better. :-) – Omnifarious Nov 7 '10 at 21:16
@Omni sounds good to me. – Pekka Nov 7 '10 at 21:16
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