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I assigned a bounty to my question and I still have not get any answer while bounty-end approaches, so I wondered what will happen if nothing changes.

Having carefully read the involved help page, I only found this:

If you do not award your bounty within 7 days (plus the grace period), the highest voted answer created after the bounty started with a minimum score of 2 will be awarded half the bounty amount (or the full amount, if the answer is also accepted). If two or more eligible answers have the same score (their scores are tied), the oldest answer is chosen. If there's no answer meeting those criteria, no bounty is awarded to anyone.

Following the last sentence above I notice that the bounty is not awarded (which seems somewhat obvious), but I don't know if I'll get my rep back.

So I tried searching Q&A and found this post, which seemed to precisely answer my question, with this excerpt (likely coming from help/faq page too):

The criteria for an answer to be eligible for automatic awarding are as follows:
- The answer must be given after the bounty was started
- The answer must have a score of at least +2
If two or more eligible answers have the same score, the oldest answer is awarded the bounty.
If no answers meet these criteria, the bounty ends without it being awarded to any answer, and is not refunded to the bounty starter.

But I'm surprised it looks quite different from the previous one.
And since the latter was posted more than 2 years ago I wonder if it might be obsolete, so I keep not sure about what happens to my offered rep.

BTW in the case it's confirmed that I'll not get my rep back if no bounty is awarded, I'd be curious to get some explanation about this rule, which seems pretty hard and not really fair: it's like spending money for nobody's benefit, and without getting any service we paid for!

2 Answers 2

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You lose the bounty.

In a practical sense, you're 'paying' for the attention with reputation. If there's no answers, the reputation gets awarded to no one.

The automatic bounty is to make it fair for people who post good answers to get the bounty, and if the OP happens to not award the reputation.

And well, sometimes you award a bounty because its a hard question. Lack of answers happen.

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  • 1
    Hm... I'm paying for the attention, not for the service: yes, once seen this way, it becomes fair. Thanks for that part of answer. In the other hand I keep surprised I couldn't find the information in the current help/bounty page.
    – cFreed
    Commented Jan 20, 2017 at 3:34
  • Its right on the first line If you’ve asked a good question, edited it with status and progress updates, and still are not receiving answers, you can draw attention to your question by placing a bounty on it.. I mean you can also offer bounties after the answer's placed, but attention really is the main purpose here
    – Journeyman Geek Mod
    Commented Jan 20, 2017 at 3:50
  • Sorry, indeed I wasn't clear in my previous comment. What I mean with "I couldn't find the information" is about the fact that the current help/bounty page is far less precise than the excerpt found it the answer I cited. In other words I wonder where this excerpt comes from, if not in help/bounty?
    – cFreed
    Commented Jan 20, 2017 at 4:22
  • @ThatRandomGuy - I flagged them as no longer being necessary. Once commentary is no longer necessary it should be deleted.
    – Ramhound
    Commented Dec 4, 2018 at 18:57
  • 1
    This rule should be amended for fairness. In this particular situation bounty should be refunded to the OP as there is no effective outcome. Commented Aug 20, 2019 at 7:11
  • I think you misunderstand what the outcome is - you're getting people to pay attention to your question. You're trading reputation for attention not answers.
    – Journeyman Geek Mod
    Commented Aug 20, 2019 at 7:21
  • And if a question doesn't even get attention (measured by views) even with a 250+ bounty (for example) then it's simply a waste. In that case, you get no attention (or very little), no outcome, and a loss. In theory your answer makes sense if attention is attracted, but take a realistic look at the questions unanswered and their view counts currently. System needs a re-think.
    – Jarad
    Commented Jul 1, 2020 at 17:52
  • Personally I feel this is not fair: I want to motivate people to find an answer. If nobody does answer, then I'm loosing my reputation points, meaning I "paid for nothing". I feel it would be more fair to have the reputation refunded. In my case there was no answer and no comment, but my reputation points are gone.
    – U. Windl
    Commented Dec 31, 2020 at 18:27
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BTW in the case it's confirmed that I'll not get my rep back if no bounty is awarded, I'd be curious to get some explanation about this rule, which seems pretty hard and not really fair.

You were told the reputation could not and would not be returned. When you clicked "start a bounty" this is what was displayed:

offer 50 of my own reputation for an answer to this question

(this reputation is deducted immediately and cannot be refunded)

You can start a total of 3 simultaneous bounties learn more

Since you had never issued a bounty before, I presume you clicked on the "learn more" link, after reading that reputation could not be refunded. Here is the fine print you agreed to:

A bounty is a special reputation award given to answers. It is funded by the personal reputation of the user who offers it, and is non-refundable. If you see a question that has not gotten a satisfactory answer, a bounty may help attract more attention and more answers. Slice off anywhere from +50 to +500 of your own hard-earned reputation, and attach it to any question as a bounty. You do not need to be the asker of the question to offer a bounty on it.

  • All bounties are paid for up front and non-refundable under any circumstances.
  • If your new reputation brings you below the requirement for any privileges, you will lose access to those privileges.
  • Users may only have three active bounties at any given time.
  • Questions may only have one active question bounty at any given time.
  • To avoid overly promotional bounties, if you are offering a bounty on a question that you have already posted an answer to, your minimum spend is 100 reputation (not 50).
  • Additionally, if you offer multiple bounties on the same question, the minimum spend doubles with each subsequent bounty (50 reputation on the first bounty, 100 reputation on the second, 200 on the third, and so on).
  • You may not cancel a bounty once it has been started.

The system attempted to educated you on exactly how the bounty system worked.

Help Center > Reputation & Moderation

it's like spending money for nobody's benefit, and without getting any service we paid for!

You are not buying an answer to your question, the bounty is for the placement of your question, in the list featured questions.

What happens when I start a bounty?

The bountied question will appear with a special indicator in all question lists, and it will also be visible on the homepage Featured tab for 7 days. Part of what you’re “paying for” with the bounty is to get additional attention for your question, over and beyond what a normal question gets. In that regard, a bounty does not guarantee a response, and reputation refunds are not available if no answers are received as a result of the bounty.

Help Center > Reputation & Moderation

Which seems pretty hard and not really fair

I am sure you have realized by now that life isn't always fair. The good news in this case, you are getting the extra attention to your question, since your question is featured listed of questions.

I assigned a bounty to my question and I still have not get any answer while bounty-end approaches, so I wondered what will happen if nothing changes.

This is an indication a problem might exist with your question. You might consider decreasing the scope of your question. I can tell you that it will be tough to find anyone with knowlege on Windows Live Mail's internal storage structure unless it's already documented by Microsoft.

So I wondered what will happen if nothing changes.

As I pointed out, the reputation was used to pay the StackExchange Question Trolls, for them to place your question on the feature question list.

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