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I recently created a bounty for a question on Stack Overflow

The bounty deadline came and went without a suitable answer (IMO). Because I wasn't happy with any of the answers I didn't accept any. Thus the bounty was awarded to the top answer.

I have no problem with the community awarding the bounty - however I would like to re-bounty to get a better answer.

A re-bounty system would be complicated and alternatives and solutions should be thoroughly debated.

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47% accept rate
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I have 2 or more bountied questions with no worthy answer – Jader Dias Jul 1 at 19:28
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I have a counter question: is the bounty feature useful? What is the ratio of the suitable/unsuitable completed bounties? I never offered a bounty but won one accidentally I think. – kd304 Jul 13 at 23:14

4 Answers

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I have a feeling the nuances of the system would become rather devilish:

  1. When you rebounty, can there be n accepted answers for the question, or only the most "accepted answer"?
  2. Is it important to visually display the fact that it's a rebounty? And if so, how?
  3. Can you rebounty indefinitely, or only n times?
  4. Would answers be segmented between those entered before and after the rebounty? If not, the second-most-voted answer has a good chance of becoming the rebounty winner. If so, are you able to override it and accept the one of the originals? How does this apply to re-re-bounties?

And I bet there's more.

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+1 for the link. – musicfreak Jun 29 at 9:23
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I guess this case is not so frequent, so simply reasking your questions with bounties would worth a try.

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It doesn't seem all that complicated to me. If no answer is accepted, then you should have the ability to offer subsequent bounties until you get an answer that you can accept.

Did you actually accept the answer on that question, or does it get automatically accepted when it earns the bounty?

I would rather see a longer time frame for open bounties. I've got one question without an accepted answer. I haven't offered a bounty because it seemed like the time limit was too short.

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I would propose that when the bounty time expires with no accepted answer, the bounty is auto-awarded via the current rules, but no answer is auto-accepted. The user could then add a new bounty, wait for new answers, continue discussion, etc...and hopefully a new and definitively correct answer will be posted and accepted.

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I could go with auto-awarding the bounty, and not auto-accepting the answer; but not adding a new bounty. Clearly the bounty didn't help - its the question that needs to be re-visited. – AnonJr Nov 3 at 20:15
@AnonJr: you're probably right in most cases, but what does it matter? It's the user that would have to re-up the bounty, and it's their rep. If they want to keep spending it, in hopes that they'll get a better response, why not let them? – beska Nov 3 at 20:25
Bad questions encourage more bad questions. Letting a user flail around with their rep doesn't fix the big problem - the question itself. While it is their rep, this would only further encourage a brute-rep approach to problem solving instead of a question refinement - the latter of which improves SO as a whole. – AnonJr Nov 3 at 20:46
Sure. But how do you force someone to write a better question? Presumably, in many cases, they've already written it as best as they can (especially if they felt compelled to put a bounty on it.) And some well written questions just don't get satisfactory answers in a short period of time, bounty or no...it seems reasonable to be able to re-up the bounty to try to encourage further development. – beska Nov 3 at 22:30
(cont) In general, I just don't see someone "brute forcing" their way to a solution with a bad question; the users that write horrible questions (again, in general), tend not to have multiples of 500 rep to throw away willy nilly. – beska Nov 3 at 22:31

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