My first time trying a bounty on a rather important question for me.
No one came close to offering anything in the way of a solution, and yet the bounty was not returned.
Why?
My first time trying a bounty on a rather important question for me.
No one came close to offering anything in the way of a solution, and yet the bounty was not returned.
Why?
The bounty is not a guarantee you are getting an answer. The bounty is advertising. You placed an advertisement in the paper here.
As such, you get what you paid for, attention. You cannot get a refund on that.
The help center is crystal clear on this:
If you’ve asked a good question, edited it with status and progress updates, and still are not receiving answers, you can draw attention to your question by placing a bounty on it.
A bounty is a special reputation award given to answers. It is funded by the personal reputation of the user who offers it, and is non-refundable. If you see a question that has not gotten a satisfactory answer, a bounty may help attract more attention and more answers.
[...]
- All bounties are paid for up front and non-refundable under any circumstances.
Emphasis mine.
The bounty dialog box also tells you this:
If the bounty was instead refunded, you could just repost the bounty, over and over, forever drawing attention to your question, and away from other, more answerable questions. That wouldn't be fair; you would get more attention for the same amount of reputation.
I agree that the "newspaper ad" analogy is not correct.
The newspaper charges you, regardless of outcome from the ad, to pay for their costs which they have to outlay regardless of the outcome from ad. Proof reading/checking alignment etc, editorial, ink, printer, delivery, etc.
It costs Stack nothing (barring extra page hits, some extra database usage from storing the bounty, etc) and as such Stack doesn't actually gain anything from it either.
If the analogy was correct, Stack would reclaim the rep to cover their costs.
It's nonsense to even compare really, comparing a profit based business service to a free public service.
Rep is put up regardless of outcome for reasons entirely different to the newspaper ad charging you.
Anyway..
Adding to what Martijn Pieters said "Refunded bounty = infinite free bounty until you get an answer" means everyone (nearly) would place a bounty on their question as there is no risk or loss involved, and if they get an answer then it was worthwhile.
And everyone (nearly) placing a bounty would dilute bounties to the point it would be common place and so no longer a unique method to gain great attention above other questions.
Bounties have to cost you rep to make them work, regardless of the outcome, it's that simple.
But again, I don't agree it matches the newspaper ad analogy at all.
The only similarity is "doing something to get attention from people", in that logic, running around McDonald’s naked is a bounty/ad....
Looks to me that it's simply because the people who make these decisions, whoever they are, do not know the difference between fairness from unfairness, or to put it simply, right from wrong.
And this is just an example of several toxic Stack Overflow policies that are only detrimental and frustration-causing to everybody, including to Stack Overflow.
https://hackernoon.com/the-decline-of-stack-overflow-7cb69faa575d
https://www.reddit.com/r/webdev/comments/7szv7i/anyone_else_find_the_stack_overflow_community/
I suppose the argument given above, that if bounties were refundable, people would just keep re-posting / spamming them forever is the best enthusiastic explanation for this policy. However, at 50 points each, I still wonder if this was ever a problem. And that brings on another question -- why then always take all of the bounty? Why couldn't the rules be that if a bounty is not answered, say only 10% of it is taken to discourage "spamming", instead of all 100%?
It's like posting a reward for a lost pet, and having to pay it even if nobody looks for it.
The current rules make posting bounties too much of a crapshoot to be worth it. Personally I just lost 50 rep points on an unanswered bounty, and don't have the desire to lose another 50. And if these points don't get my bounty answered and are so easy to lose, then what's the point of amassing them anyway.
And that's too bad, because bounties could be used to encourage answers to really hard questions, that would be useful for everybody.
So my answer to this question is, that bounties are non-refundable because (1) the people who make these decisions do now know the difference between fairness and unfairness (to be polite about it). And also because of (2) one of life's most true virtues -- No good deed goes unpunished!
And because (3) there are only two things guaranteed in life -- death and taxes. And possibly because of (4) the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commons
Another reason why is because (5) there currently does not appear to be an active alternative to this service on the Internet, so as a monopoly it does not need to try to be better.
So there you go, I just came up with no less than 5 good explanations for this misery!