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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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In the last few weeks on Meta, I've seen a handful of questionable audit cases involving not particularly great questions that had received a ton of upvotes. In several of these cases, the voting could be traced back to a bounty being placed on those questions. Even a 50 point bounty was enough to drive 8+ upvotes to borderline questions.

It appears that the reason behind this is their prominent placement within the Featured Questions tabFeatured Questions tab on the front page. In fact, if you look down the list of featured questions you find a large number of upvotes on each. Many of these questions would not otherwise receive votes like this. A random sampling of a few of these seems to indicate that almost all votes came after the bounty was placed on a question.

In many cases, the reputation gained from votes outweighs the 50 point bounty, so this seems like people are able to get a lot of attention for their questions for free.

Beyond the troubling audit cases this is creating, is this a larger problem? Should the design around how these are presented be changed?

Should we just exclude previously bountied questions from being audit cases?

In the last few weeks on Meta, I've seen a handful of questionable audit cases involving not particularly great questions that had received a ton of upvotes. In several of these cases, the voting could be traced back to a bounty being placed on those questions. Even a 50 point bounty was enough to drive 8+ upvotes to borderline questions.

It appears that the reason behind this is their prominent placement within the Featured Questions tab on the front page. In fact, if you look down the list of featured questions you find a large number of upvotes on each. Many of these questions would not otherwise receive votes like this. A random sampling of a few of these seems to indicate that almost all votes came after the bounty was placed on a question.

In many cases, the reputation gained from votes outweighs the 50 point bounty, so this seems like people are able to get a lot of attention for their questions for free.

Beyond the troubling audit cases this is creating, is this a larger problem? Should the design around how these are presented be changed?

Should we just exclude previously bountied questions from being audit cases?

In the last few weeks on Meta, I've seen a handful of questionable audit cases involving not particularly great questions that had received a ton of upvotes. In several of these cases, the voting could be traced back to a bounty being placed on those questions. Even a 50 point bounty was enough to drive 8+ upvotes to borderline questions.

It appears that the reason behind this is their prominent placement within the Featured Questions tab on the front page. In fact, if you look down the list of featured questions you find a large number of upvotes on each. Many of these questions would not otherwise receive votes like this. A random sampling of a few of these seems to indicate that almost all votes came after the bounty was placed on a question.

In many cases, the reputation gained from votes outweighs the 50 point bounty, so this seems like people are able to get a lot of attention for their questions for free.

Beyond the troubling audit cases this is creating, is this a larger problem? Should the design around how these are presented be changed?

Should we just exclude previously bountied questions from being audit cases?

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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In the last few weeks on Meta, I've seen a handful of questionablequestionable audit casesaudit cases involving not particularly great questions that had received a ton of upvotes. In several of these cases, the voting could be traced back to a bounty being placed on those questions. Even a 50 point bounty was enough to drive 8+ upvotes to borderline questions.

It appears that the reason behind this is their prominent placement within the Featured Questions tab on the front page. In fact, if you look down the list of featured questions you find a large number of upvotes on each. Many of these questions would not otherwise receive votes like this. A random sampling of a few of these seems to indicate that almost all votes came after the bounty was placed on a question.

In many cases, the reputation gained from votes outweighs the 50 point bounty, so this seems like people are able to get a lot of attention for their questions for free.

Beyond the troubling audit cases this is creating, is this a larger problem? Should the design around how these are presented be changed?

Should we just exclude previously bountied questions from being audit cases?

In the last few weeks on Meta, I've seen a handful of questionable audit cases involving not particularly great questions that had received a ton of upvotes. In several of these cases, the voting could be traced back to a bounty being placed on those questions. Even a 50 point bounty was enough to drive 8+ upvotes to borderline questions.

It appears that the reason behind this is their prominent placement within the Featured Questions tab on the front page. In fact, if you look down the list of featured questions you find a large number of upvotes on each. Many of these questions would not otherwise receive votes like this. A random sampling of a few of these seems to indicate that almost all votes came after the bounty was placed on a question.

In many cases, the reputation gained from votes outweighs the 50 point bounty, so this seems like people are able to get a lot of attention for their questions for free.

Beyond the troubling audit cases this is creating, is this a larger problem? Should the design around how these are presented be changed?

Should we just exclude previously bountied questions from being audit cases?

In the last few weeks on Meta, I've seen a handful of questionable audit cases involving not particularly great questions that had received a ton of upvotes. In several of these cases, the voting could be traced back to a bounty being placed on those questions. Even a 50 point bounty was enough to drive 8+ upvotes to borderline questions.

It appears that the reason behind this is their prominent placement within the Featured Questions tab on the front page. In fact, if you look down the list of featured questions you find a large number of upvotes on each. Many of these questions would not otherwise receive votes like this. A random sampling of a few of these seems to indicate that almost all votes came after the bounty was placed on a question.

In many cases, the reputation gained from votes outweighs the 50 point bounty, so this seems like people are able to get a lot of attention for their questions for free.

Beyond the troubling audit cases this is creating, is this a larger problem? Should the design around how these are presented be changed?

Should we just exclude previously bountied questions from being audit cases?

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Brad Larson Mod
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Should I be concerned about Featured Questions inflating votes?

In the last few weeks on Meta, I've seen a handful of questionable audit cases involving not particularly great questions that had received a ton of upvotes. In several of these cases, the voting could be traced back to a bounty being placed on those questions. Even a 50 point bounty was enough to drive 8+ upvotes to borderline questions.

It appears that the reason behind this is their prominent placement within the Featured Questions tab on the front page. In fact, if you look down the list of featured questions you find a large number of upvotes on each. Many of these questions would not otherwise receive votes like this. A random sampling of a few of these seems to indicate that almost all votes came after the bounty was placed on a question.

In many cases, the reputation gained from votes outweighs the 50 point bounty, so this seems like people are able to get a lot of attention for their questions for free.

Beyond the troubling audit cases this is creating, is this a larger problem? Should the design around how these are presented be changed?

Should we just exclude previously bountied questions from being audit cases?