Here's one to get shot down: How about letting bounties to be set using the reputation gained through the use of another site? So, for instance, I'm a programmer with a high Stack Overflow rep who hates using computers. Wouldn't it be useful for me to be able to exchange some of my excess Stack Overflow credit to incentivise a question on Super User?

Or perhaps I'd like to highlight a question on Meta Stack Overflow, but I don't spend my time immersed in the grey with diseased poo colour scheme.

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+1 for "immersed in the grey with diseased poo colour scheme" – theotherreceive Jul 20 '09 at 3:58
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I usually think of it as the "bloody newspaper" color scheme, but your description is much more "colorful". – gnostradamus Aug 7 '09 at 16:02
so whats the decision on this? – Aditya P Mar 18 '11 at 12:32
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This was such a good idea -- why was this declined?!?!?! – Adam Rackis Oct 19 '11 at 19:29
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@AdamRackis: I don't participate in Meta very much. It would be a bit odd if, despite not having demonstrated much interest in helping run the site, I could give up some of my more easily-acquired www.stackoverflow reputation to draw more attention to my requests. Giving up reputation is, in part, a way of telling the more helpful people, "I've given a lot to this site, so I am especially deserving of your help." Mark does provide a justification for that, but I can see my point, the reverse of that justification, as being similarly reasonable. There are possibly engineering issues, too. – Brian Oct 20 '11 at 21:57
@Brian I don't think bounties are a way to say "I've given a lot to this site, so I am especially deserving of your help." I think bounties are a way for experienced users to spend some rep to buy extra attention on really hard questions. As Lance said, the main risk would be spending your SO rep on unworthy Cooking questions, but as he said, limiting your ability to do this to technical sites would be a good protection against that. Specifically, if you have a high SO rep, you can probably be trusted to not bounty trivial questions on meta. – Adam Rackis Oct 21 '11 at 19:50
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6 Answers

This makes a lot of sense to me. Most of us are specialized to a large degree, making it hard to build up adequate amounts of rep at all of the sites. The site where you aren't an expert is the site where you'd most likely find a bounty to be useful.

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Exactly what I was going to say. +1 – Spencer Ruport Jun 11 '10 at 18:38
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I think this could lead to some potential abuse (basically using rep on one site to boost up an account on another site).

It's an interesting idea and the way you described it as a way for people who are invested in one site to get a potentially quick answer on another site without having to go through the effort of building up rep there sounds logical. I just don't have a very good feeling that it would ever even get seriously considered.

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Bounties always have had potential for abuse. Effectively having to have your accounts permanent disassociated would seem a reasonable deterrent given the threat. – Tom Hawtin - tackline Jul 20 '09 at 1:52
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On the first glance, this looks like a good idea: If I earned reputation hard by answering questions in my specialty field, why shouldn't I be allowed to spend some of this for my questions in the fields where I'm not so good, and really need the help?

For example, I've answered lots of questions on Stack Overflow, but now I have a cooking question (and I have about no chance to earn significant reputation on Seasoned Advice, this is why I need the question answered), so why shouldn't I be allowed to use some of my SO reputation to put a bounty on my cooking question?

This would make the cross-site reputation a kind of global SE currency (but usable only for bounty purposes).

The problem with this is that reputation on different sites has actually different value. On some sites it is a lot easier to earn upvotes with an answer (or a question) than on other ones. (The same problem is existent within Stack Overflow, though: Answers in more frequented tags get a lot more votes than answers of similar difficulty in small tags. But it is somehow deemed okay.)

Additionally, the idea is that each site can develop its own community, and the site-reputation should somehow measure the standing in this community. Receiving a bounty from someone outside the community does not relate to this.

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You raise a good point; however, I think a good compromise would be to just limit how much rep you could use for this purpose. Say, up to 150 per question, 500 per year? 500 per 6 months? I do see how frequently dropping 500pt bounties on cooking might disrupt the "exchange rate" of their rep, but I think there are good ways to limit this, while still getting the benefits this would provide. – Adam Rackis Oct 20 '11 at 15:38
Maybe also needing to pay more "foreign reputation" than the bounty size could help (e.g. you pay 100 reputation for a 50 rep bounty or similar). – Paŭlo Ebermann Oct 20 '11 at 22:36
I agree with this post. It's like trying to convince the US government to let you spend a little Canadian money in the US every once in awhile. They're both called dollars, but they're not compatible. US dollars (site #1 rep) buy US goods (site #1 bounties) and not Canadian goods (site #2 bounties). I don't think we have any appropriate method for currency conversion either; there are no "rep banks" to handle the supply and demand :P – Matthew Read Nov 18 '11 at 16:01
And certainly it seems almost abusive to gain rep at site #1 and then go to site #2 and draw attention away from other questions with a bounty you didn't earn the right to offer. – Matthew Read Nov 18 '11 at 16:02
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I totally agree, though I'm not surprised to notice that it has already been proposed and was just ignored.

I'll copy+paste my duplicate post here:

Wouldn't it be nice to have cross-site bounties?

After all, if I am a developer I am likely to have points on SO, and not many on SF, and vice-versa.

I think probably everyone would benefit from such a feature.

Update: I agree that cross-site reputation, privileges or many other things would be bad. Bounties however, are a completely different topic. You "pay" some earned rep to the person that will answer a question that isn't get an answer otherwise. You are skilled in a field, and you need help in another field: that's the founding principle of the entire economic system in general.

Cross-site privileges would mean awarding powers in a field to people who do not have earned it in that filed, and that is bad.

Cross-site bounties means allowing you to sell your milk to buy some meat.

Edit: one possible addition to that, just in case too many people frown upon such a feature, could be not to add the extra 50 rep for the cross-site bounties.

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I think that'd work good for the technical, even somewhat related computer sites, like SO, Ubuntu, Apple, etc., but not so sure about the non-technical computer sites like English, Cooking, etc.

Since you're buying the bounty with rep that is supposed to represent some level of knowledge, I think the cross-site bounties would work well for interrelated sites. If you have the rep on Stack Overflow, then that should show you have some level of technical acumen, so that you can be trusted on the other technical sites like Super User to bounty relevant questions.

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@Brad, that was true at the time you wrote it, but not anymore. – Popular Demand Oct 4 '10 at 18:55
@Lance - do you still stand by this answer that it wouldn't work for SE sites? I'd reeeeaaaalllly like to offer a bounty on some apple.SE questions, but have insufficient rep. This feature would be really useful imo. – Adam Rackis Oct 19 '11 at 19:28
@Adam, modified to be more current, you should put a bounty on this question. – Lance Roberts Oct 20 '11 at 4:51
That would be a great compromise. Let users open bounties from SO rep to SU, Apple, ServerFault, Programmers, etc. Can you elaborate on why you think it wouldn't work on Cooking, English, etc? I "feel" like I agree, but I can't really figure out why. – Adam Rackis Oct 20 '11 at 15:40
@Adam, ok, edited. – Lance Roberts Oct 20 '11 at 15:45
Good point—agree. "trusted to bounty relevant questions" – Adam Rackis Oct 20 '11 at 15:50
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I think this is one example of why fragmentation of the QA sites is not a very good thing (see also What could be done to serve domain specific "communities" better on SO?) and perhaps some tighter integration (perhaps even a reputation shared between all sites) could be better.

I predict this answer can provoke comments about how I cannot compare reputation from Stack Overflow with reputation from Super User, as the fact I understand one does not mean I understand the other. This, however, is in my opinion no different from the fact that while I have quite solid C++ background, I do not understand a bit about AJAX, Ruby, SQL and other things questioned on SO, yet this is not apparent from the reputation I have on SO, and still this does not seem to cause any issues.

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