After issuing my first bounty on Stack Overflow, I think there is some rethinking that needs to be done on how this system works.
If you issue any bounty on Stack Overflow, those rep points are gone from you forever. The thinking is that you are paying to gain extra attention for your issue. This model makes sense for your own questions but not for someone else's questions.
The current bounty system for other people's questions is flawed because it does not incentivize members to reexamine older questions that need better answers. In fact, it actively penalizes those actions by charging you rep points to do so - completely the opposite of the behavior we want to encourage.
What I would like to propose is a different set of rules for putting a bounty on someone else's question:
- When a community member puts a bounty on someone else's question, they have judged a question to be insufficiently answered and in need of a better/canonical answer. This is an action that would, theoretically, benefit all of S.O (but not necessarily).
- The bounty should be held in escrow by S.O. during the bounty period.
- If someone leaves a subjectively better answer (new answer has LESS upvotes than currently accepted answer), the bounty offerer can reward it to answerer just like now. The rep is then transferred from the escrow to the answerer. Offerer receives nothing in this scenario, same as now.
- If someone leaves an objectively better answer (new answer is more than 10 upvotes better than old answer), bounty offerer's offer is matched by S.O. (like a PBS fundraising drive). Both the answerer and offerer are given the now doubled-bounty. This would incentivize community-beneficial bounties, better matching the risk/reward ratio for putting a bounty on someone else's question.
- If no one answer is judged to be a better answer by the offerer, the rep points should automatically go back to offerer. This would encourage more people to put bounties on insufficiently answered questions because they could get a rebate if no better information is added by the community.
This is just a proposal but I think it would go a long way to reforming what is a broken process for putting bounties on other people's questions.