What happens if a bounty expires, but the question still has no answers?
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7You need more than this statement from the FAQ? "A bounty does not guarantee a response, however, and reputation refunds are not available if no answers are received as a result of the bounty."– LouisCommented Sep 1, 2014 at 11:38
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3@Louis I suppose it does, but it's easy to miss...– Niet the Dark AbsolCommented Sep 1, 2014 at 11:40
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1What if a competition ends and no one participated in it. What happens to the grand prize?– Aziz ShaikhCommented Sep 1, 2014 at 11:40
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10@AzizShaikh In theory, the competition organiser just keeps the prize - obviously not what happens with bounties here ;)– Niet the Dark AbsolCommented Sep 1, 2014 at 11:41
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2@NiettheDarkAbsol Stack Exchange keeps the bounty reps in this case :)– Aziz ShaikhCommented Sep 1, 2014 at 11:42
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1@AzizShaikh: Hey come on, they have to feed the unicorns somehow...– Patrick HofmanCommented Sep 1, 2014 at 12:42
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9And the real question that comes to my mind is that: Why doesn't the bounty reward back to the asker when there is no answer ??!– PanizCommented Jan 25, 2015 at 9:30
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4(This is a little old school, but...) When you place an ad in the newspaper to sell your Pokemon card collection, but no one responds, the newspaper doesn't refund your money. That's essentially what a bounty is.– aleCommented Jun 15, 2016 at 14:24
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2newspaper logic seems irrelevant when offering your own reputation points is called Bounty and not Ad. If goal of this page is providing answers to questions, I would expect that you do not loose the points so you can always offer more– Jan HrubyCommented Oct 5, 2016 at 12:51
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3I agree with @JanHruby because newspaper ads means money, newspaper company running on money but is that stackoverflow running on reputation. In other word what is the point of destroying reputation thats earned by effort of someone.– BlasankaCommented Aug 10, 2017 at 17:00
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1The justification here and in the FAQ seem to relate SE bounties to advertising. I tend to associate the word "bounty" with a reward, which would be transferred when the task is successfully completed. Now that I have read the FAQ, it makes sense, but it wasn't intuitive and perhaps a better name could have avoided some misunderstanding.– craqCommented Sep 20, 2018 at 3:58
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1Maybe they're thinking of converting SE rep into a crypto-currency ;)– DylanYoungCommented Dec 21, 2018 at 18:10
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1I have put a few bounties to some questions that got no answers. But interestingly, I always got my reputation back. I wonder why that was, if they were supposedly non-refundable.– The Harmonic RainbowCommented Nov 30, 2021 at 0:40
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Can someone know if we can't give reputation to yourself ? Like self-answer and accept it ?– Elikill58Commented Dec 6, 2021 at 12:36
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1@O.R.Mapper You're paying the platform for the visibility and to attract users to the question. Part of that attraction is the possibility of being awarded the bounty, but the visibility and attraction occur regardless of whether the bounty is awarded to anyone. The service of attracting the users is performed regardless of whether an answer is received.– Ryan M ModCommented May 4, 2023 at 13:03
3 Answers
The FAQ does answer what happens when a bounty expires but the question has no answers:
If there's no answer meeting those criteria, the bounty is not awarded to anyone.
Combined with:
All bounties are paid for up front and non-refundable under any circumstances.
at the top, it should be painfully obvious that when there are no answers, and the bounty already paid up front, the bounty simply goes pop.
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13
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43Though this policy is clear, it is also pretty ridiculous. Why would you not give the person who asked the question a refund on their points if the question was well received (highly upvoted) but received no answer? Also, it is a very non-intuitive policy. Why would you expect a bounty to disappear into thin air if nobody claims it?– Byte LabCommented Dec 14, 2016 at 6:42
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14@DIMMSum: because a bounty is advertising, not a warranty. When you place an ad in the paper for your new mousetrap, all you'll know is that people will see the ad, there is no guarantee people will buy the product (or your money back!).– Martijn Pieters ModCommented Dec 14, 2016 at 11:07
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41@MartijnPieters true, but I don't really think it's in the spirit of the site. Should your "reputation" that you've built up from contributing to the community be penalized because nobody else in the community could help you for a question? It also discourages people from putting up bounties. I guess I just don't see any reason for the policy being this way.– Byte LabCommented Dec 14, 2016 at 20:00
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4
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6@matt: the server admins have to wear hearing protection whenever they are working on the hardware, in case of unawarded bounties going 'pop'.– Martijn Pieters ModCommented Aug 13, 2018 at 15:14
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12@MartijnPieters, that
advertising
argument is really ridiculous IMO. Rep is not a currency in the sense of an mag advert. I would understand it if the rep is not refunded if there are answers but none is accepeted, because the system can not know if the asker tries to cheat or if the answers were useless. Would maybe need a moderator to clear it. If there are no answers, then the rep should go back. It's more likeI pay anybody who can bring me the answer dead or alive
but if nobody ever shows up there is nobody I could give the money and thus it stays with me.– DevolusCommented May 5, 2021 at 10:15 -
No refunds makes sense to me. If you get your reputation back, users would game this. e.g. I could put 500 rep on every one of my questions from now on and never accept any of the answers to my question or pay out the bounty... Commented Feb 11, 2022 at 4:28
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2@Devolus: you are not doing the advertising however. You pay the site to do the advertising. It's exactly like paying Google for adverts when people search for something. Showing an ad doesn't mean that anyone will actually click the link or buy your product. You can shout out your own window about your award, but no-one on the site would know about it.– Martijn Pieters ModCommented Feb 11, 2022 at 9:11
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2@MartijnPieters, I guess this can be viewed differently as well. Rep has no inherent value to the site, so it's not as if you are really "paying the site". It's more like pinning up a paper on the supermarket black board (which is free to use) saying "I need X and pay Y for it". The supermarket gets not share. Just like stackoverflow also does not get a share. Or what do you think that stackoverflow does with all that uncollected rep it "got payed" with? There is no payment against stackoverflow.– DevolusCommented Feb 11, 2022 at 9:57
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1@Devolus: yet that's not how this works. The supermarket will not make the board more visible to shoppers in the relevant isles, while questions with bounties get special billing on the site. And if rep has no inherent value as you say, why do you care so much about that you want it back?– Martijn Pieters ModCommented Feb 11, 2022 at 11:13
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2For me I will be more confident in the use of bounties if they weren't going to expire. I understand why you cannot take the rep back. But atleast mantain the bounty (even if you don't advertise it anymore). Just mantain it as a hidden bounty or something. If I put 50 rep in a question (which is a lot for me since I have less than 600 rep) at least I want somebody to get it. Commented Jun 7, 2022 at 11:51
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1@Ryan.Bartsch: "I could put 500 rep on every one of my questions from now on and never accept any of the answers to my question" - the discussion here concerns specifically the case where your question did not receive any answers. It is completely ok for the bounty rep to vanish if there has been at least one answer, but the asker decided against awarding the bounty to that answer. Commented May 4, 2023 at 12:57
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2@Ryan.Bartsch: Ok, but as I wrote, that is beside the point. It is completely ok if the asker loses the bounty rep in that situation. The case discussed here is a different one, namely that there were no answers at all, so the asker could not award the bounty to any of them. It is in that specific situation where I, and others in this and similar threads, argue the asker should be refunded their points. Commented May 5, 2023 at 5:00
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1I don't think it actually goes pop. I think the community bot steals them. Commented Mar 21 at 5:22
You have to pay for a bounty upfront, and no refunds are possible, according to https://stackoverflow.com/help/bounty
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4Why is that? This is a really bad rule. If nobody answers you should be able get the bounty back... Stackoverflow change this...– ysigCommented May 17, 2023 at 13:44
If you delete a question that you had previously started bounty on, you get your reputation points back.
There's a section on a Meta SE Q/A about this:
What happens if a question where I awarded a bounty later gets deleted or migrated?
If a question on which you have started or awarded a bounty on later gets deleted, then in most cases, your reputation is refunded. It can take a few minutes for this to happen. If the question is later undeleted or migration is rejected, the reputation is deducted again. Source
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This covers questions that have an awarded bounty - by default questions without answers cannot have an answer that was awarded the bounty. In addition: "Update: As of February 13, 2018, the bounty reputation is no longer refunded upon question deletion if the bounty awardee gets to retain it (because it scored +3 and was visible for at least 60 days)."– CharonXCommented Nov 28, 2023 at 9:53
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@CharonX it says “started or awarded”. Anyway, the part where it is refunded if you delete is still true though, I’ve seen it happen, like in the meta question linked. Commented Nov 28, 2023 at 14:26