This morning I came across a bountied question. It only had one answer, and the answer was wrong, so I downvoted it and left a comment explaining why it was wrong (it would have messed OP's files).
The question itself looked like something that should be easily doable, though; so I spent some time crafting and testing a solution, and some 20 minutes later I posted a correct answer myself.
Now here comes the problem: after I posted my answer, the author of the first answer edited theirs to copy my solution.
If we end up having the same score, the bounty will go to them, since their answer was the first one to be posted, even if it was later changed. Bit unfair, isn't it?
I already dealt with the plagiarism part by flagging the answer, as suggested in other Meta posts about this. But this is a behavior that I think can be exploited to get an advantage in bountied questions, especially in low-traffic tags:
- Post incomplete/wrong answer to bountied question.
- Wait for better answers to offer better/full/correct answers (Cunningham's Law, anybody?)
- Edit answer to include correct/full solution.
- In case of a tie, get bounty thanks to being the "first answer". Maybe even be manually awarded the bounty, since your answer would appear correct and on top of the others (if you order by Active).
So, in a more general sense, what can be done to deter the above behavior? Making the bounty go to the answer with the oldest last revision, maybe? As in, if you edit your answer after other answers have been posted, then your answer should not be considered the "first" anymore?
rm -rf
torm -f
is superficial.HTML
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