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I like the reasoning of Brad LarsonBrad Larson in his answeranswer,

At least one person had given a good answer in the hopes of winning the bounty, and to remove it would be pulling the rug out from underneath them.

as people have written in good faith and put in effort and it's not fair to punish them by removing the bounty.

Also removing the bounty and refunding the OP is giving them something for nothing. They get multiple answers, from the extra attention and don't lose the rep most people have to pay to get that attention.

My take on refunding bounties is when the questions really are not answerable in a real sense (someone can always post an answer, but it may be meaningless or worthless).

I like the reasoning of Brad Larson in his answer,

At least one person had given a good answer in the hopes of winning the bounty, and to remove it would be pulling the rug out from underneath them.

as people have written in good faith and put in effort and it's not fair to punish them by removing the bounty.

Also removing the bounty and refunding the OP is giving them something for nothing. They get multiple answers, from the extra attention and don't lose the rep most people have to pay to get that attention.

My take on refunding bounties is when the questions really are not answerable in a real sense (someone can always post an answer, but it may be meaningless or worthless).

I like the reasoning of Brad Larson in his answer,

At least one person had given a good answer in the hopes of winning the bounty, and to remove it would be pulling the rug out from underneath them.

as people have written in good faith and put in effort and it's not fair to punish them by removing the bounty.

Also removing the bounty and refunding the OP is giving them something for nothing. They get multiple answers, from the extra attention and don't lose the rep most people have to pay to get that attention.

My take on refunding bounties is when the questions really are not answerable in a real sense (someone can always post an answer, but it may be meaningless or worthless).

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user3956566
user3956566

I like the reasoning of Brad Larson in his answer,

At least one person had given a good answer in the hopes of winning the bounty, and to remove it would be pulling the rug out from underneath them.

as people have written in good faith and put in effort and it's not fair to punish them by removing the bounty.

Also removing the bounty and refunding the OP is giving them something for nothing. They get multiple answers, from the extra attention and don't lose the rep most people have to pay to get that attention.

My take on refunding bounties is when the questions really are not answerable in a real sense (someone can always post an answer, but it may be meaningless or worthless).