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Relating to this question cygwin/race condition

I was writing my comment / request for more information, as the comment editor "told" me I had 100 chars too many, and I was not even ready.

So I decided to post my comment for more information as an answer.

I wrote this as first line / bold.

The one who asked, made a mistake, and gave me the bounty, but my assumptions were wrong (since I had only assumptions, I did not want to answer)

So now I have a bounty that I am not entitled to.

Is there a chance to give it back? I feel a bit like a thief, or like "take the bounty and run"

(P.S: if it was a "100K SO specialist", I'd have less bad feelings)

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    Open your console in your browser edit your reputation and then just don't reload anymore, just don't :)
    – Rizier123
    Commented Jul 25, 2015 at 22:23
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    You could always pass it forward, put another bounty on a question you're interested in or where you think one of the answers deserves some extra credit.
    – nkjt
    Commented Jul 25, 2015 at 22:27
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    @Rizier123: why not reloading, I write a browser plugin, that does that for me ;-)
    – halfbit
    Commented Jul 26, 2015 at 11:13
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    Don't mess with karma!
    – MeanGreen
    Commented Jul 27, 2015 at 13:07
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    For goodness' sake, ignore the whole StackOverflow rewards system. It's designed for schoolchildren who won't do their work unless rewarded with a gold star. Take part in StackOverflow if you enjoy it, don't take part if you don't, and let others worry about earning brownie points. Commented Jul 28, 2015 at 15:20

2 Answers 2

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Don't worry about it.

Reputation is only a very rough measure of anything, anyway. During your future SO "career", you'll gain many points you feel you didn't earn; you will also fail to gain a lot of points you may feel you should have earned (for excellent answers with hours of research on an obscure topic, for example).

No one else appeared to have a correct answer, either. So the user would have lost the bounty amount either way.

Perhaps they thought it better to give it to someone who put an effort into answering (you) instead of no one benefiting from it at all.

No harm done.

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    Just so. Call it a credit against future awesome answers that don't get noticed.
    – Sobrique
    Commented Jul 27, 2015 at 8:41
10

Bounties do not work that way : they are proposed by somebody for a limited time, but since that moment the bounty value is deduced from the promoter (I call him/her that way because it can be question asker or anyone else) rep and this cannot be undone.

Next, if promoter finds a question deserving the bounty until expiration time, he can manually award it. In that case the answerer receives the full bounty value. Here again nothing can be undone after manually awarding.

If the bounty has not been manually awarded at expiration time, the best answer with at least +2 will automatically receive half value of the bonus

References : How does the bounty system work?

Now to answer your question, it is clear that you cannot give it back. If it makes you feel bad, the best you can do is to try to improve your answer. For the rest, you tried to help, your answer is clearly more than a comment, and OP decided your answer was the best. If another user later posts another answer better than yours, you simply should :

  • upvote it if it deserves it
  • edit your own answer to reference it, saying that it was posted after bonus award but you thing it is better than yours

That way, even if the quality of that answer would not deserve the bonus per se, you will have done your best to improve the site. And if it is not enough for you to feel good, just do your best to improve the site, by flagging incorrect posts, duplicates, and also try to talk on meta. All that will indeed deserve the 50 points rep !

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    Nitpicking: This technically can be undone -- diamond moderators can refund bounties and have been know to do so once in a full moon. Commented Jul 26, 2015 at 15:39
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    @FrédéricHamidi : It is cited in the referenced link, but the link also says the do so for exceptional circumstances which IMHO is not the case here :-) Commented Jul 26, 2015 at 15:52
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    I'm curious - what kind of exceptional circumstances have been known to cause diamond moderators to refund bounties? Full moons are rather regular (sometimes as often as twice a month) so I feel like there must be some patterns that have become apparent in the few years that SO has existed. Commented Jul 26, 2015 at 23:43
  • @ArtOfWarfare Could be a good idea to ask a new question for that.
    – AStopher
    Commented Jul 27, 2015 at 8:30
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    @ArtOfWarfare: Moderators will refund bounties on questions which ought to be closed, since bountied questions cannot be closed.
    – Kevin
    Commented Jul 27, 2015 at 13:35

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