I don't dislike it. It's original and interesting. The basic thinking behind it is sound: if a bounty question doesn't get a useful answer, it is presumably a hard question, so having a bounty pot that grows (like in a lottery when no one wins the jackpot) and increases people's motivation to answer it makes sense.
Some potential problems could be solved through additional safeguards:
to prevent people from using the system to post work assignments (any more than they already do), this would have to be limited to one bounty per question per user
the auto-award feature would have to be turned off in these cases to prevent frivolous answers accidentally winning a huge pot of rep (or rather, half of it)
One big unsolved problem remains, though. Who gets to award the jackpot?
One could start a bounty on a question that already has a number piled up, and then award the entire sum to an undeserving answer - either as a fraud, or because they simply don't know better. Neither of the previous bounty starters can influence which answer their points go to. That's hardly acceptable.
The only alternative I can think of - put the awarding in the hands of the community and give the jackpot to the first new answer that gains a massive number of upvotes, say 10 or 15 - isn't really good, either: in low-volume tags the answer may never reach the requisite number of upvotes, plus a requirement like this would be a huge motivation to create sock puppet accounts to do the voting.
So - nice idea, but has too big implementation problems, IMO.