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If you look at the bounties tab, you see all of the questions that people want answered. However, should we be encouraging people to put bounties on other people's questions more often? Many people have good questions but are new contributors, so they do not have enough reputation to create bounties. Bounties are "a reputation reward you can put on a question to get it more attention for exactly one week." Most of the bounties placed currently are by the creator of the question. Should other people be placing more bounties?

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    If people want to, they can. If they don't want to, they don't have to. That's the right amount.
    – khelwood
    Commented Mar 31 at 16:19
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    People who have asked the question have the most interest invested in said question, it's therefore not surprising that the majority of bounties are from the author.
    – Thom A
    Commented Mar 31 at 16:21
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    The second largest group is likely third parties who have an interest in the question (such as after running into the same problem). Bounties for other reasons than that are rare at best Commented Mar 31 at 16:44
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    "Many people have good questions but are new contributors" -- huh? What tags do you frequent?
    – Dan Mašek
    Commented Mar 31 at 21:16
  • "should we be encouraging people" - unless what follows is similar to "follow the rules", the answer is no. The site is already difficult enough, let's not "encourage" people to make a mess of things even further.
    – Gimby
    Commented Apr 2 at 9:27

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Generally, people who put bounties on other people's questions would be someone who has the same question, and wants the answer badly enough that they are willing to offer a bounty. This provides an incentive to askers to make their question as useful to others as possible, not only to attract upvotes, but also increases the chance that someone else will bounty their question if they have not gotten an answer.

Bounties from someone who is not the question author is a signal that the question was so helpful to someone else that they were willing to spend their reputation to offer a bounty. Encouraging offering bounties on mediocre questions would dilute this.

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