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The general low quality of questions is a problem. Allowing users to award their own reputation to authors of great questions would help.

I can currently award reputation (via bounty) only to authors of great answers. From How does the bounty system work?:

You can award your bounty to any answer on the question. This makes it possible for users to reward particularly good answers with more rep than a standard upvote would provide.

To indicate that your bounty will be awarded to an existing answer, choose "Reward existing answer" when asked "Why are you starting this bounty?"

I recently came across this well-written question. I upvoted it, but I'd like to similarly reward the author with "more rep than a standard upvote would provide".

Broader than the scope of this individual question, this ability could help encourage users to write better questions. A surprise award could also help Stack Overflow feel more welcoming and less intimidating for new users.


Additional Details

  • This should not be named Bounty. I'd call it reward, or perhaps good question reward.
  • Like bounties, a minimum reputation level should be necessary to judge good questions. While awarding bounties only requires a rep of 75, I'd propose a minimum rep of 1,000 to reward good questions. This would help address Servo's concern in the comments that this would encourage poor, click-baity questions.
  • Like bounties, the author would lose any reputation they reward.

Related but not duplicate

My search for existing questions on this topic revealed only one similar question, which is a different proposal. Can we have something akin to Reddit's “Gold” here for nice posts? suggests a 500-point bounty for question authors when the post has 10+ upvotes. I'm suggesting an arbitrary bounty that any well-qualified user can give to any question author.

One comment in that post is related:

The question asker already got their reward: answers. The extra attention drawn by a bounty would also lead to upvotes (provided the question is a good one).

That said, these indirect rewards aren't directly tied to writing a great question and do not directly encourage this behavior.

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  • I think you'll need to be more specific about an exact concept (and proper naming) for a feature-request. Mar 30, 2015 at 17:30
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    You're incorrectly conflating popular with quality. There are tons of questions with lots of upvotes that are just bikeshed questions that don't even belong on the site. A significant bounty like this would only encourage people to post more inappropriate but popular and click-baity posts that people love talking about but that are rarely even on topic questions. The best questions come from people with actual problems, actually trying to get help; not from people asking questions to try to get rep, without caring about the answers.
    – Servy
    Mar 30, 2015 at 17:35
  • @Servy Good point. I was also already thinking about asking the OP for the certain conditions and judgments necessary to make such award. Mar 30, 2015 at 17:36
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    @Servy Why do you think high-rep users would reward those click-bait posts? My point is that we should be doing a better job of awarding actual good questions, like the one I linked to. Don't you think high-rep users know better? Mar 30, 2015 at 17:42
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    @AaronBrager I'd expect to see at least some amount of it for exactly the same reason questions like those get upvotes. People are entertained by them, regardless of their value.
    – Servy
    Mar 30, 2015 at 17:44
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    @Servy That could be mostly addressed by making this a privilege with a minimum bounty. I have updated this post to suggest a 1,000 rep requirement to earn this privilege. Mar 30, 2015 at 17:46
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    @πάνταῥεῖ Outside of making this an earned privilege, do you suggest any additional conditions / judgments necessary? Mar 30, 2015 at 17:47
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    Questions are generally second-class citizens on Stack Overflow, and the general assumption is that getting an answer is the true reward for a good question. The reasoning in this blog post: blog.stackoverflow.com/2011/06/optimizing-for-pearls-not-sand explains the thinking behind it.
    – Pekka
    Mar 30, 2015 at 17:48
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    @Pekka웃 Yes, I've read that, and agree with it, but that doesn't mean we don't need to improve question optimization. On the other hand, we clearly do: there are many more poor questions than good ones, and the close queue shows no signs of getting to zero any time soon. Mar 30, 2015 at 17:51
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    I changed the question title because it was misleading and may have been the reason for the downvotes. It sounded like you just wanted to give more reputation to people which isn't really what StackExchange is about. I do think giving some of your own reputation might not be that bad of an idea.
    – aug
    Mar 30, 2015 at 17:57
  • @aug Thanks for the edit. I think it clarifies things. Mar 30, 2015 at 17:57
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    @AaronBrager And you think that the ability to award bounties to questions would decrease the number of low quality questions the site gets? I strongly doubt it. The vast majority of the people that ask the worse of the low quality questions wouldn't ever spend enough time looking at how the site works to even know that such a feature would be possible, let alone care enough about Imaginary Internet Points to spend time crafting a quality question just to get some.
    – Servy
    Mar 30, 2015 at 18:00
  • arrgh you've entirely changed the proposal and now comments and answers don't stand. Answers were based on you proposing to use the current "bounty" system. Not a entirely new "reward" system.
    – James
    Mar 30, 2015 at 18:05
  • @James I don't think I changed anything except the name. See the revision history. Mar 30, 2015 at 18:09
  • The bit under "Additional Details" section proposes a "new" reward system. Your original question seemingly proposed using the current bounty system, as per the answers. nw
    – James
    Mar 30, 2015 at 18:29

3 Answers 3

5

While this sounds kind, and potentially great on face value, I'm not in favour of it.

The biggest issue I see is:

Rep going to the wrong place

The questioner doesn't need bounty rep as they have a question to ask and want an answer, not rep. A question "already exists" as the questioner has a question to ask, so their "payment" in the Q&A transaction is an answer, which is what they wanted.

However answers do not "already exist", it takes someone time to answer, and their only "payment" in the transaction is gaining rep (of course the joy of helping someone, etc).

So questioner gets their answer, answerer gets their rep.
And I don't think questioner should get bounty rep as well as an answer, not when that rep could have been given to a deserving answerer who only gets rep.

A great question which would arguably deserve bounty rep would usually also get a great answer, and the rep should go to the answerer.

Doesn't attract better questions

The question has to already exist to be able to apply a bounty. So this proposal wouldn't attract better questions, as the current bounty does with answers.

The new feature might make some questioners ask better questions, but:

  1. Poor questioners tend not to care about such things, just getting their answer
  2. Anyone asking a question worthy of bounty rep is likely going to be asking a decent one anyway regardless of this feature
  3. Hardly anyone will award their rep to a question, so once people realise this there will be no attraction to spend time writing a better question

Only awards a few

There are not many "great" questions, certainly not new ones, and the older ones have probs got enough rep by now from years of the odd vote here and there.

So as not many people will award a question bounty rep, and great questions are rare, we'd be introducing a new reward system for a limited few people who write great questions, which is not really fair on a large community driven site.

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  • I disagree with your point #3, but your counterarguments #1 and #2 make sense. Mar 30, 2015 at 18:05
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    @AaronBrager You really think people will award rep to questions? They barely get upvotes which cost nothing, let alone something which actually costs at least 50 rep.
    – James
    Mar 30, 2015 at 18:07
  • I think high-rep users will. Mar 30, 2015 at 18:08
  • I disagree strongly. I think high rep users will award answers over questions. Even if so, there aren't many great questions worthy of such a reward
    – James
    Mar 30, 2015 at 18:11
  • I agree about the lack of great questions. My hypothesis is that their quantity will increase with the availability of additional rewards. There are plenty of high-rep users who already give away lots of rep to great answers, and would also give rep to reward great questions. Once you hit 20k, there are no additional privileges to earn by going higher. I don't really have anything to lose by spending lots of rep rewarding great content. Mar 30, 2015 at 18:17
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    You cannot force or attract great questions with a reward system, as anyone with such a question will post it anyway. Maybe that's wrong, but it's how I see it. You could offer £500 real life cash, and you'd not attract many more great questions. they don't exist in the quantity you seem to believe they do
    – James
    Mar 30, 2015 at 18:27
  • Perhaps we have a definitional issue. I don't mean to reward questions that are revolutionary within computer programming, but simply questions that embody the ideas outlined in How do I ask a good question? and How to create a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example. Almost all of the poor questions on Stack Overflow could be greatly improved by following these guidelines. Mar 30, 2015 at 19:06
  • I'd say there are thousands and thousands of poor questions which could become great questions through better writing. Mar 30, 2015 at 19:06
  • "I'd say there are thousands and thousands of poor questions which could become great questions through better writing" Well yes that is the basic premise. But how would bounty or new reward system bring about such a change? Do you have any example questions you would award such a reward to? And how much rep would you award to the example?
    – James
    Mar 30, 2015 at 19:09
  • Yes, I linked to this example question in my post. I would offer 300-500 rep. The availability of such rewards would encourage users to spend more time writing and editing their questions. Mar 30, 2015 at 19:14
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    Can you make a compelling argument as to why you would award that 500 of your rep? It's gained 2 upvotes - if that is unfair or wrong, then the issue we need to tackle is getting people to vote more, not just throwing a heap of rep at it.
    – James
    Mar 30, 2015 at 19:23
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    @AaronBrager "questions that embody the ideas outlined in [...]" - you want to give bonus reputation to people who follow the minimum requirements for questions? The posts you linked are more a list of things to avoid to not create a crappy question; every question that does not adhere to these standards should be downvoted and possibly closed. I don't know why you seem to think it would be a good idea to award 500 rep to a guy who only ever posted 3 questions and 1 answer, just because he followed the rules. That's no way to solve the SO quality problems.
    – l4mpi
    Mar 31, 2015 at 6:39
  • Many systems encourage behavior by rewarding people who follow the rules. And as I point out earlier, the current system isn't working well. Mar 31, 2015 at 9:09
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    @AaronBrager The current system isn't working well because the quality standards are not enforced enough. Most people who post a crappy question or simply copypaste their homework assignments on SO don't care about creating a high-quality resource or even about rep, they simply want someone to do their work. And btw, people are getting rewarded for following the rules, by getting good answers and upvotes. But as you seriously want to give somebody the equivalent rep of 50 answer upvotes for nothing more than creating a MCVE, I don't think this discussion will lead anywhere.
    – l4mpi
    Mar 31, 2015 at 9:29
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    Thanks for the discussion. You changed my mind on this. Apr 3, 2015 at 18:34
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It's a nice thought but it wouldn't work.

Bounties are not suited to encourage good questions.

They work fine in the current system where only answers can get bounties: there is a question that really really needs an answer, so bad that someone (either the asker or someone else) is willing to lose some reputation points to see the question receive a good answer.

When that happens and someone puts the rep on the table, a competition starts, with the bounty being an extra incentive to provide a really great answer. If all goes well, a lot of people think or Google really hard, good answers come up, the bounty is awarded, and a good time was had by all.

With questions, you could only give the reward after the great question has already been asked. There is no competition to be had, it'd be like tipping someone for providing exceptional service. That would be nice occasionally, but because only a tiny fraction of people will be willing to part with points to reward a great question they come across, the overall cultural effect of this will be about zero.

  • You can already start a bounty on someone else's question. If you see a great question that still lacks an answer, you are always welcome to do that.

  • If you want a reliable mechanism to encourage good questions, it already exists in the form of voting! If you want to encourage more good questions, you would have to, for example, roll back the change that reduced the rep gained on a question upvote from 10 to 5. It seems unlikely that will happen, though.

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  • "it'd be like tipping someone for providing exceptional service": why do you think "only a tiny fraction of people will be willing to part with points"? Plenty of people tip… and with money, which is more valuable than rep. Mar 30, 2015 at 18:03
  • @AaronBrager: Probably mostly because it isn't really a service for me, but them doing what's in their best interest to get an answer. Regarding rep for question upvotes: I'm not sure there's any connection at all, though I don't have any data... Mar 30, 2015 at 18:06
  • Also: re "it already exists in the form of voting", this system doesn't appear to be working well. Mar 30, 2015 at 18:15
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I think this is a good idea. Look, the point, other than egoboo, of SO is to create a useful resource. Certainly my students at the various places I've taught, think so.

It's hard to make it a good resource without encouraging good questions. While upvote points are good, bounty points would be a much more significant sort of approval.

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    But naming it bounty is misleading. It should be something like a "bonus" that a user can award from their own rep to the OP. Mar 30, 2015 at 17:28
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    @πάνταῥεῖ I'd be fine changing the name of the reward. Mar 30, 2015 at 17:29
  • @AaronBrager Yeah reward, that's much better. Mar 30, 2015 at 17:31
  • I updated the post to distinguish between bounty and reward. Mar 30, 2015 at 17:48

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