fbpx
Wikipedia

Bounty (reward)

A bounty is a payment or reward of money to locate, capture or kill an outlaw or a wanted person. Two modern examples of bounties are the ones placed for the capture of Saddam Hussein and his sons by the United States government[1] and Microsoft's bounty for computer virus creators.[2] Those who make a living by pursuing bounties are known as bounty hunters.

A bounty flyer offering rewards on behalf of the "Anti-Taliban Forces" in Afghanistan

Examples

Historical examples

Written promises of reward for the capture of or information regarding criminals go back to at least the first-century Roman Empire. Graffiti from Pompeii, a Roman city destroyed by a volcanic eruption in 79 AD, contained this message:

A copper pot went missing from my shop. Anyone who returns it to me will be given 65 bronze coins (sestertii). Twenty more will be given for information leading to the capture of the thief.[3]

A bounty system was used in the American Civil War as an incentive to increase enlistments. Another bounty system was used in New South Wales to increase the number of immigrants from 1832.[4]

 
£20 reward offered for information in Kidderminster house burglary, 1816.

Bounties were sometimes paid as rewards for killing Native Americans. In 1862, a farmer received a bounty for shooting Taoyateduta (Little Crow). In 1856, Governor Isaac Stevens put a bounty on the head of Indians from eastern Washington, for ordinary Indians and for a "chief". A western Washington Indian, Patkanim, chief of the Snohomish, obligingly provided a great many heads, until the territorial auditor put a stop to the practice due to the dubious origins of the deceased.[citation needed]

In Australia in 1824, a bounty of 500 acres (200 ha) of land was offered for capturing alive the Wiradjuri warrior Windradyne, the leader of the Aboriginal resistance movement in the Bathurst Wars. A week after the bounty was offered, the word "alive" was dropped from the reward notices, but he was neither captured nor betrayed by his people.[5]

Bounties have been offered on animals deemed undesirable by particular governments or corporations. In Tasmania, the thylacine was relentlessly hunted to extinction based on such schemes. Gray wolves, too, were extirpated from much of the present United States by bounty hunters. An example of the legal sanction granted can be found in a Massachusetts Bay Colony law dated May 7, 1662: "This Court doth Order, as an encouragement to persons to destroy Woolves, That henceforth every person killing any Woolf, shall be allowed out of the Treasury of that County where such woolf was slain, Twenty shillings, and by the Town Ten shillings, and by the County Treasurer Ten shillings: which the Constable of each Town (on the sight of the ears of such Woolves being cut off) shall pay out of the next County rate, which the Treasurer shall allow."[6]

17th-century examples

Since after the Restoration, criminality was increasing, the dissatisfaction with the penal system led to the implementation of the rewards. £10 were promised to anyone who gave information about a robber or burglar and a pardon was also granted to convicts able to provide evidence against their accomplices.[7] Between 1660 and 1692, Parliament introduced a series of statutes that offered rewards up to £40. Under William III, the rewards became a systematic element in the fight against crime, an alternative to erase the most dangerous threats to the community. The first example of permanent reward was in 1692, when £40 (together with the offender's horse, arms, and money) were offered for the discovery and the conviction of offenders who committed serious property crimes – highway robbery, burglary and housebreaking, coining, and other offences.[8] The trial judges became fundamental to the administration of the rewards system because the statutes put them in charge of apportioning the reward among the persons who claimed to have participated in procuring the conviction. As it was written in the legislation of 1692, "...in case any Dispute shall happen to arise between the persons so apprehending any the said Thieves and Robbers touching their right and title to the said Reward that then the said Judge or Justices so respectively certifying as aforesaid shall in and by their said Certificate direct and appoint the said Reward to be paid unto and amongst the Parties claimeing the same in such share and proportions as to the said Judge or Justices shall seem just and reasonable"[9]

18th-century examples

In the 18th century, the English government episodically offered rewards by proclamation; in 1720, a royal proclamation offered bounties for the unmasking of murderers or highway robbers, sometimes worth as much as £100. When a statutory reward overlapped a proclamation, prosecuting or convicting of a highway robber could be worth £140 a head (£100 under proclamation, £40 by statute), £240 for a pair or £420 for a three-person group. These were huge sums at the time when an artisan earned about £20 and a labourer less than £15 per year.[10] Supplementary reward was part of the administration of the law for six years, then with the death of George I, it came to an end. After two years, in February 1728, a new proclamation reinstated the £100 reward by respecting the original terms. Private parties were also free to offer rewards in addition to rewards by proclamations, then this practice was taken up by governmental departments and local authorities.[11] In 1716, Robert Griffith was indicted for stealing from Thomas Brooks, one silver watch, value £51, and one gold watch, value £18, from Mary Smith. She offered a reward of £15 to anyone who gave information about the robber. The reward was received by Mr. Holder, after he brought Mrs. Smith the silver watch that was stolen.[12] In 1732, Henry Carey offered a reward of 2 guineas for the securing of Richard Marshall, and three more for his conviction. Marshall, together with Mary Horsenail and Amy Mason, were indicted for breaking and entering the house of Mr. Carey in Dorrington-street. They were also indicted for robbery. Marshall was secured by Mr. Parker, that received the 2-guinea reward as promised. Australian bushranger Ned Kelly held the most wanted bounty of the 1800s, for £8000; Ned was wanted dead or alive.[13]

Rewards and thief-takers

In creating incentives to overcome criminality, the rewards system risked overincentivizing. This led to the development of the profession of thief-taker. They were part of the criminal underworld, but they were seen as offering an advantageous service to the state.[14] Victims of theft in London, facilitated by the circulation of newspapers, took advantage of advertising to recover their stolen goods. They offered a reward "with no questions asked".[15] Since prosecutors usually resorted to the legal system, they had to pay for the proceedings at the Old Bailey; though the offender was convicted, they often lost their goods forever. For this reason, prosecutors decided to bypass the legal system, recovering their goods by resorting to advertising.[16] Thief-takers were the perfect intermediates between victims and offenders and received a portion of the reward offered. Jonathan Wild, a prominent figure of the underworld, successfully combined thief-taking with the activity of simplifying the return of stolen goods by paying rewards to the thieves.[17] In the early 1720s, he controlled London's underworld, but his activity became a threat to the community and the integrity of the penal system. In 1725, Wild was accused of stealing 50 yards (46 m) of lace, valued at £40, from the shop of a blind woman, Catherine Statham. He admitted accepting a reward of 10 guineas from Mrs. Statham for helping her to recover the stolen lace. He was acquitted of the first charge but with Mrs. Statham's evidence presented against him on the second charge he was convicted and sentenced to death.[18]

Fictional representations

The figure of Jonathan Wild inspired the character of Mr. Peachum in The Beggar's Opera, a satirical ballad opera in three acts written in 1728 by John Gay. Peachum controls a large group of thieves, and is connected to the government and courts. Because of these connections, he can decide whether to allow a captured criminal to be hanged (in that case he receives a reward) or to be released. In scene II, Peachum gives evidence against another member of his gang, Tom Gagg, in exchange for a reward of £40. Then in scene IV, Mrs. Peachum, Peachum's wife, enters and inquires about Bob Booty, her favorite member of the gang. Peachum will accept a £40 reward for allowing Bob to be hanged.[19]

Steve McQueen played bounty hunter Josh Randall in the Western television series Wanted Dead or Alive (1958–1961).

Boba Fett and the Mandalorian are bounty hunters in the Star Wars universe.

Two films directed by Quentin Tarantino, Django Unchained and The Hateful Eight, focus on the stories of bounty hunters in the United States in the mid to late 1800s.

21st-century examples

The majority of prisoners held in Guantánamo Bay detainment camp were handed over by bounty hunters.[20]

The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston offered a $5 million reward for the return, in good condition, of the 13 works of art taken from its galleries in March 1990.[21]

Other uses

Mathematics

The term "bounty" is used in mathematics to refer to a reward offered to any person willing to take on an open problem. Bounties are offered for solving a particular math problem – ranging from small lemmas that graduate students solve in their spare time to some of the world's hardest math problems. Paul Erdős was famous for offering mathematical bounties.[22]

Economics

In economics the term "bounty" has often been used in the sense of a negative tax.[23]

Open-source software

In the computer science and open-source community, bounty refers to a reward offered to any person or project willing to solve open problems, for instance, implementing a feature or finding a bug in an open-source software program (open-source bounty). For instance, the Mozilla Foundation offers bounties for security bug hunting.[24][25] Bounty-driven development is one of the business models for open-source software.

Poker

In poker tournaments, a money bounty is awarded for knocking a player out of the tournament. Some tournaments offer a bounty for any eliminated player, while others offer them only for certain players, usually well-known professional players, sometimes celebrities.

Cryptocurrency

In cryptocurrency, bounty campaign is a popular marketing tool used widely to support the launch of a new cryptocurrency, new dApp game or a new blockchain platform. In a bounty campaign, participants receive small amounts of cryptocurrency tokens in exchange for providing social media engagement (for instance, tweeting and retweeting) or for creating promotional materials (such as Youtube videos).

Bounty work overtook in popularity the earlier promotional tactic of airdropping tokens to the holders of a different cryptocurrency.

Motorsport

Often, if a driver or team has won multiple consecutive races, a race track or sanctioning body will establish a bounty on a team. This practice is common on local short tracks, especially if a driver has won three consecutive weeks or more. The bounty often is increased for every race the offending driver or team continues to win, and is claimed upon another driver or team ending that winning streak. After Chip Ganassi Racing won six consecutive Rolex Sports Car Series races, Grand American Road Racing Association established a bounty to the team that beats Ganassi. On May 14, 2011, Action Express Racing defeated Ganassi, and claimed the bounty. [26]

After Kyle Busch won six consecutive NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series races over a two-season span, driver Kevin Harvick and series sponsor Camping World Holdings placed a $100,000 bounty to a full-time Cup Series driver that defeats Busch in one of the remaining four races Busch is eligible to participate. Numerous Cup Series drivers announced plans to enter the $100,000 bounty races. On the first race of the four on May 26, 2020, Chase Elliott claimed the bounty in defeating Busch at the North Carolina Education Lottery 200. Harvick and Camping World will donate the bounty to COVID-19 relief efforts. A separate bounty had been planned by Halmar International, a sponsor on a Kyle Busch Motorsports truck, for $50,000 if a Truck Series regular defeated Busch, but that was cancelled because the sponsor used the money for COVID-19 relief efforts.[27]

In May 2021, the National Hot Rod Association and Constant Aviation announced a $1,000 bounty will be placed on the driver who wins the previous Factory Stock Showdown race. If the said driver repeats, the bounty money is added to the next round, making the bounty $2,000 (and so forth). The program will continue in 2022.[28]

American football

Bounties, referring to bonuses for in-game performance, are officially banned by the National Football League, the sport's dominant professional league. Despite this, bounties have had a significant history within the sport. Notable examples include a 1989 game between the Dallas Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles that became known as the Bounty Bowl, and a bounty scheme organized by players and coaches with the New Orleans Saints that was uncovered in 2012, leading to substantial penalties.

Recruitment

Bounty is also used to refer to bonus payments made to staff on recruitment (or for recommending others for recruitment). This practice used to be common in the military (it was standard practice in the British Army during the 19th century),[29] but has since been largely phased out, only to become relatively widespread amongst civilian employers. Many reserve armed forces also pay a retention "bounty" to personnel who meet or exceed participation and training thresholds.[30]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Saddam bounty may go unclaimed". CNN. December 15, 2003. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
  2. ^ Sturgeon, Will (May 10, 2004). "Cheat Sheet: Microsoft's virus bounty". Tech Republic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  4. ^ . geocities.com. Archived from the original on October 20, 2009. Retrieved April 7, 2006.
  5. ^ Lowe, David (1994). Forgotten Rebels: Black Australians Who Fought Back (PDF). Melbourne: Permanent Press. pp. 4–9. ISBN 978-0646156866. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
  6. ^ Early American Imprints, 1st series, no. 88.
  7. ^ J.M. Beattie, Crime and the Courts in England, 1660–1800, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1986. ISBN 978-0691101668.
  8. ^ J.M. Beattie, Policing and Punishment in London, 1660–1750: Urban Crime and the Limits of Terror, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 978-0198208679.
  9. ^ William and Mary, 1692: An Act for encourageing the apprehending of Highway Men [Chapter VIII Rot. Parl. pt. 3. nu. 3.]', in Statutes of the Realm: Volume 6, 1685–94, ed. John Raithby (s.l, 1819), pp. 390–391 http://www.british-history.ac.uk/statutes-realm/vol6/pp390-391 Retrieved 24 November 2015.
  10. ^ J.H. Langbein, The Origins of Adversary Criminal Trial, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2003, p. 91. ISBN 978-0199258888.
  11. ^ Langbein, J.H. (1983). Shaping the Eighteenth-Century Criminal Trial: A View from the Ryder Sources. Chicago: University of Chicago Law Review. pp. 106–108.
  12. ^ Old Bailey Proceedings Online (accessed 28 November 2015), Trial of Robert Griffith. (t17161105-5, 5 November 1716).
  13. ^ Old Bailey Proceedings Online (accessed 28 November 2015), Trial of Richard Marshall, Mary Horsenail, Amy Mason. (t17321011-29, 11 October 1732).
  14. ^ J.M. Beattie, Policing and Punishment in London, 1660–1750: Urban Crime and the Limits of Terror, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2001, p. 55.
  15. ^ T. Hitchcock and R. Shoemaker, Tales from the Hanging Court, London, Bloomsbury Academic, 2007, p. 3. ISBN 978-0340913758.
  16. ^ T. Hitchcock and R. Shoemaker, Tales from the Hanging Court, London, Bloomsbury Academic, 2007, p. 2.
  17. ^ T. Hitchcock and R. Shoemaker, Tales from the Hanging Court, London, Bloomsbury Academic, 2007, p. 17.
  18. ^ Old Bailey Proceedings Online (accessed 28 November 2015), Trial of Jonathan Wilde [sic]. (t17250513-55, 13 May 1725).
  19. ^ E.V. Roberts, The Beggar's Opera by John Gay, Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press, 1969. ISBN 978-0803253612
  20. ^ Dedman, Bill (October 23, 2006). "Gitmo interrogations spark battle over tactics". msnbc.com. NBC News. Retrieved December 14, 2006.
  21. ^ . Federal Bureau of Investigation. March 18, 2013. Archived from the original on August 1, 2013. Retrieved 3 August 2013.
  22. ^ Seife, C. (2002). "MATHEMATICS: Erdos's Hard-to-Win Prizes Still Draw Bounty Hunters". Science. 296 (5565): 39–40. doi:10.1126/science.296.5565.39. PMID 11935003. S2CID 34952867.
  23. ^ "A tax may be taken as representative of those changes which may cause a general increase, and a bounty as representative of those which may cause a general diminution in the normal supply price." – Alfred Marshall, Principles of Economics (1890 and many subsequent editions), V.XIII.4. "All of the action necessary to achieve a given ethical desideratum may take the form of lump sum taxes or bounties." – P. A. Samuelson, Foundations of Economic Analysis (1947), p. 245.
  24. ^ Evers, Joris (July 25, 2005). "Offering a bounty for security bugs". CNET. CBS Interactive. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
  25. ^ "Mozilla Foundation Announces Security Bug Bounty Program". Mozilla Foundation. Mountain View, California. August 2, 2004. Retrieved August 12, 2007.
  26. ^ AP Wire. "Bill Lester becomes first black Grand-Am winner". Oklahoman.com. The Oklahoman. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  27. ^ Mayer, Matthew. "Chase Elliott collects bounty, mocks Kyle Busch after winning NASCAR Truck Series Race at Charlotte". CBSSPORTS.COM. VC. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  28. ^ NHRA.COM. "NHRA, Constant Aviation launch Factory Stock Showdown Bounty program". NHRA.COM. NHRA. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  29. ^ Myerly, Scott Hughes (1996). British Military Spectacle: From the Napoleonic Wars Through the Crimea. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 53–54. ISBN 978-0-674-08249-6. The enlistment bounty never covered the cost of clothing and necessaries, except during the French and Crimean wars, so a recruit might enter the army in debt and not receive any pay for six months or more after enlistment.
  30. ^ "Territorial Army 'to be renamed the Army Reserve'". BBC News Online. BBC News. October 14, 2012. Retrieved August 2, 2013.

External links

bounty, reward, bounty, payment, reward, money, locate, capture, kill, outlaw, wanted, person, modern, examples, bounties, ones, placed, capture, saddam, hussein, sons, united, states, government, microsoft, bounty, computer, virus, creators, those, make, livi. A bounty is a payment or reward of money to locate capture or kill an outlaw or a wanted person Two modern examples of bounties are the ones placed for the capture of Saddam Hussein and his sons by the United States government 1 and Microsoft s bounty for computer virus creators 2 Those who make a living by pursuing bounties are known as bounty hunters A bounty flyer offering rewards on behalf of the Anti Taliban Forces in Afghanistan Contents 1 Examples 1 1 Historical examples 1 2 17th century examples 1 3 18th century examples 1 4 Rewards and thief takers 1 5 Fictional representations 1 6 21st century examples 2 Other uses 2 1 Mathematics 2 2 Economics 2 3 Open source software 2 4 Poker 2 5 Cryptocurrency 2 6 Motorsport 2 7 American football 2 8 Recruitment 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksExamples EditHistorical examples Edit Written promises of reward for the capture of or information regarding criminals go back to at least the first century Roman Empire Graffiti from Pompeii a Roman city destroyed by a volcanic eruption in 79 AD contained this message A copper pot went missing from my shop Anyone who returns it to me will be given 65 bronze coins sestertii Twenty more will be given for information leading to the capture of the thief 3 A bounty system was used in the American Civil War as an incentive to increase enlistments Another bounty system was used in New South Wales to increase the number of immigrants from 1832 4 20 reward offered for information in Kidderminster house burglary 1816 Bounties were sometimes paid as rewards for killing Native Americans In 1862 a farmer received a bounty for shooting Taoyateduta Little Crow In 1856 Governor Isaac Stevens put a bounty on the head of Indians from eastern Washington for ordinary Indians and for a chief A western Washington Indian Patkanim chief of the Snohomish obligingly provided a great many heads until the territorial auditor put a stop to the practice due to the dubious origins of the deceased citation needed In Australia in 1824 a bounty of 500 acres 200 ha of land was offered for capturing alive the Wiradjuri warrior Windradyne the leader of the Aboriginal resistance movement in the Bathurst Wars A week after the bounty was offered the word alive was dropped from the reward notices but he was neither captured nor betrayed by his people 5 Bounties have been offered on animals deemed undesirable by particular governments or corporations In Tasmania the thylacine was relentlessly hunted to extinction based on such schemes Gray wolves too were extirpated from much of the present United States by bounty hunters An example of the legal sanction granted can be found in a Massachusetts Bay Colony law dated May 7 1662 This Court doth Order as an encouragement to persons to destroy Woolves That henceforth every person killing any Woolf shall be allowed out of the Treasury of that County where such woolf was slain Twenty shillings and by the Town Ten shillings and by the County Treasurer Ten shillings which the Constable of each Town on the sight of the ears of such Woolves being cut off shall pay out of the next County rate which the Treasurer shall allow 6 17th century examples Edit Since after the Restoration criminality was increasing the dissatisfaction with the penal system led to the implementation of the rewards 10 were promised to anyone who gave information about a robber or burglar and a pardon was also granted to convicts able to provide evidence against their accomplices 7 Between 1660 and 1692 Parliament introduced a series of statutes that offered rewards up to 40 Under William III the rewards became a systematic element in the fight against crime an alternative to erase the most dangerous threats to the community The first example of permanent reward was in 1692 when 40 together with the offender s horse arms and money were offered for the discovery and the conviction of offenders who committed serious property crimes highway robbery burglary and housebreaking coining and other offences 8 The trial judges became fundamental to the administration of the rewards system because the statutes put them in charge of apportioning the reward among the persons who claimed to have participated in procuring the conviction As it was written in the legislation of 1692 in case any Dispute shall happen to arise between the persons so apprehending any the said Thieves and Robbers touching their right and title to the said Reward that then the said Judge or Justices so respectively certifying as aforesaid shall in and by their said Certificate direct and appoint the said Reward to be paid unto and amongst the Parties claimeing the same in such share and proportions as to the said Judge or Justices shall seem just and reasonable 9 18th century examples Edit In the 18th century the English government episodically offered rewards by proclamation in 1720 a royal proclamation offered bounties for the unmasking of murderers or highway robbers sometimes worth as much as 100 When a statutory reward overlapped a proclamation prosecuting or convicting of a highway robber could be worth 140 a head 100 under proclamation 40 by statute 240 for a pair or 420 for a three person group These were huge sums at the time when an artisan earned about 20 and a labourer less than 15 per year 10 Supplementary reward was part of the administration of the law for six years then with the death of George I it came to an end After two years in February 1728 a new proclamation reinstated the 100 reward by respecting the original terms Private parties were also free to offer rewards in addition to rewards by proclamations then this practice was taken up by governmental departments and local authorities 11 In 1716 Robert Griffith was indicted for stealing from Thomas Brooks one silver watch value 51 and one gold watch value 18 from Mary Smith She offered a reward of 15 to anyone who gave information about the robber The reward was received by Mr Holder after he brought Mrs Smith the silver watch that was stolen 12 In 1732 Henry Carey offered a reward of 2 guineas for the securing of Richard Marshall and three more for his conviction Marshall together with Mary Horsenail and Amy Mason were indicted for breaking and entering the house of Mr Carey in Dorrington street They were also indicted for robbery Marshall was secured by Mr Parker that received the 2 guinea reward as promised Australian bushranger Ned Kelly held the most wanted bounty of the 1800s for 8000 Ned was wanted dead or alive 13 Rewards and thief takers Edit In creating incentives to overcome criminality the rewards system risked overincentivizing This led to the development of the profession of thief taker They were part of the criminal underworld but they were seen as offering an advantageous service to the state 14 Victims of theft in London facilitated by the circulation of newspapers took advantage of advertising to recover their stolen goods They offered a reward with no questions asked 15 Since prosecutors usually resorted to the legal system they had to pay for the proceedings at the Old Bailey though the offender was convicted they often lost their goods forever For this reason prosecutors decided to bypass the legal system recovering their goods by resorting to advertising 16 Thief takers were the perfect intermediates between victims and offenders and received a portion of the reward offered Jonathan Wild a prominent figure of the underworld successfully combined thief taking with the activity of simplifying the return of stolen goods by paying rewards to the thieves 17 In the early 1720s he controlled London s underworld but his activity became a threat to the community and the integrity of the penal system In 1725 Wild was accused of stealing 50 yards 46 m of lace valued at 40 from the shop of a blind woman Catherine Statham He admitted accepting a reward of 10 guineas from Mrs Statham for helping her to recover the stolen lace He was acquitted of the first charge but with Mrs Statham s evidence presented against him on the second charge he was convicted and sentenced to death 18 Fictional representations Edit The figure of Jonathan Wild inspired the character of Mr Peachum in The Beggar s Opera a satirical ballad opera in three acts written in 1728 by John Gay Peachum controls a large group of thieves and is connected to the government and courts Because of these connections he can decide whether to allow a captured criminal to be hanged in that case he receives a reward or to be released In scene II Peachum gives evidence against another member of his gang Tom Gagg in exchange for a reward of 40 Then in scene IV Mrs Peachum Peachum s wife enters and inquires about Bob Booty her favorite member of the gang Peachum will accept a 40 reward for allowing Bob to be hanged 19 Steve McQueen played bounty hunter Josh Randall in the Western television series Wanted Dead or Alive 1958 1961 Boba Fett and the Mandalorian are bounty hunters in the Star Wars universe Two films directed by Quentin Tarantino Django Unchained and The Hateful Eight focus on the stories of bounty hunters in the United States in the mid to late 1800s 21st century examples Edit The majority of prisoners held in Guantanamo Bay detainment camp were handed over by bounty hunters 20 The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston offered a 5 million reward for the return in good condition of the 13 works of art taken from its galleries in March 1990 21 Other uses EditMathematics Edit The term bounty is used in mathematics to refer to a reward offered to any person willing to take on an open problem Bounties are offered for solving a particular math problem ranging from small lemmas that graduate students solve in their spare time to some of the world s hardest math problems Paul Erdos was famous for offering mathematical bounties 22 Economics Edit In economics the term bounty has often been used in the sense of a negative tax 23 Open source software Edit In the computer science and open source community bounty refers to a reward offered to any person or project willing to solve open problems for instance implementing a feature or finding a bug in an open source software program open source bounty For instance the Mozilla Foundation offers bounties for security bug hunting 24 25 Bounty driven development is one of the business models for open source software Poker Edit Main article Bounty poker In poker tournaments a money bounty is awarded for knocking a player out of the tournament Some tournaments offer a bounty for any eliminated player while others offer them only for certain players usually well known professional players sometimes celebrities Cryptocurrency Edit In cryptocurrency bounty campaign is a popular marketing tool used widely to support the launch of a new cryptocurrency new dApp game or a new blockchain platform In a bounty campaign participants receive small amounts of cryptocurrency tokens in exchange for providing social media engagement for instance tweeting and retweeting or for creating promotional materials such as Youtube videos Bounty work overtook in popularity the earlier promotional tactic of airdropping tokens to the holders of a different cryptocurrency Motorsport Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Often if a driver or team has won multiple consecutive races a race track or sanctioning body will establish a bounty on a team This practice is common on local short tracks especially if a driver has won three consecutive weeks or more The bounty often is increased for every race the offending driver or team continues to win and is claimed upon another driver or team ending that winning streak After Chip Ganassi Racing won six consecutive Rolex Sports Car Series races Grand American Road Racing Association established a bounty to the team that beats Ganassi On May 14 2011 Action Express Racing defeated Ganassi and claimed the bounty 26 After Kyle Busch won six consecutive NASCAR Gander RV amp Outdoors Truck Series races over a two season span driver Kevin Harvick and series sponsor Camping World Holdings placed a 100 000 bounty to a full time Cup Series driver that defeats Busch in one of the remaining four races Busch is eligible to participate Numerous Cup Series drivers announced plans to enter the 100 000 bounty races On the first race of the four on May 26 2020 Chase Elliott claimed the bounty in defeating Busch at the North Carolina Education Lottery 200 Harvick and Camping World will donate the bounty to COVID 19 relief efforts A separate bounty had been planned by Halmar International a sponsor on a Kyle Busch Motorsports truck for 50 000 if a Truck Series regular defeated Busch but that was cancelled because the sponsor used the money for COVID 19 relief efforts 27 In May 2021 the National Hot Rod Association and Constant Aviation announced a 1 000 bounty will be placed on the driver who wins the previous Factory Stock Showdown race If the said driver repeats the bounty money is added to the next round making the bounty 2 000 and so forth The program will continue in 2022 28 American football Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bounties referring to bonuses for in game performance are officially banned by the National Football League the sport s dominant professional league Despite this bounties have had a significant history within the sport Notable examples include a 1989 game between the Dallas Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles that became known as the Bounty Bowl and a bounty scheme organized by players and coaches with the New Orleans Saints that was uncovered in 2012 leading to substantial penalties Recruitment Edit Bounty is also used to refer to bonus payments made to staff on recruitment or for recommending others for recruitment This practice used to be common in the military it was standard practice in the British Army during the 19th century 29 but has since been largely phased out only to become relatively widespread amongst civilian employers Many reserve armed forces also pay a retention bounty to personnel who meet or exceed participation and training thresholds 30 See also EditBounty jumper BountySource Contract killing Bounty hunterReferences Edit Saddam bounty may go unclaimed CNN December 15 2003 Retrieved August 12 2007 Sturgeon Will May 10 2004 Cheat Sheet Microsoft s virus bounty Tech Republic CBS Interactive Retrieved August 3 2013 Graffiti from Pompeii Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved February 23 2016 Immigration geocities com Archived from the original on October 20 2009 Retrieved April 7 2006 Lowe David 1994 Forgotten Rebels Black Australians Who Fought Back PDF Melbourne Permanent Press pp 4 9 ISBN 978 0646156866 Retrieved August 3 2013 Early American Imprints 1st series no 88 J M Beattie Crime and the Courts in England 1660 1800 Princeton Princeton University Press 1986 ISBN 978 0691101668 J M Beattie Policing and Punishment in London 1660 1750 Urban Crime and the Limits of Terror Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0198208679 William and Mary 1692 An Act for encourageing the apprehending of Highway Men Chapter VIII Rot Parl pt 3 nu 3 in Statutes of the Realm Volume 6 1685 94 ed John Raithby s l 1819 pp 390 391 http www british history ac uk statutes realm vol6 pp390 391 Retrieved 24 November 2015 J H Langbein The Origins of Adversary Criminal Trial Oxford Oxford University Press 2003 p 91 ISBN 978 0199258888 Langbein J H 1983 Shaping the Eighteenth Century Criminal Trial A View from the Ryder Sources Chicago University of Chicago Law Review pp 106 108 Old Bailey Proceedings Online accessed 28 November 2015 Trial of Robert Griffith t17161105 5 5 November 1716 Old Bailey Proceedings Online accessed 28 November 2015 Trial of Richard Marshall Mary Horsenail Amy Mason t17321011 29 11 October 1732 J M Beattie Policing and Punishment in London 1660 1750 Urban Crime and the Limits of Terror Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 p 55 T Hitchcock and R Shoemaker Tales from the Hanging Court London Bloomsbury Academic 2007 p 3 ISBN 978 0340913758 T Hitchcock and R Shoemaker Tales from the Hanging Court London Bloomsbury Academic 2007 p 2 T Hitchcock and R Shoemaker Tales from the Hanging Court London Bloomsbury Academic 2007 p 17 Old Bailey Proceedings Online accessed 28 November 2015 Trial of Jonathan Wilde sic t17250513 55 13 May 1725 E V Roberts The Beggar s Opera by John Gay Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1969 ISBN 978 0803253612 Dedman Bill October 23 2006 Gitmo interrogations spark battle over tactics msnbc com NBC News Retrieved December 14 2006 The Gardner Museum Theft Federal Bureau of Investigation March 18 2013 Archived from the original on August 1 2013 Retrieved 3 August 2013 Seife C 2002 MATHEMATICS Erdos s Hard to Win Prizes Still Draw Bounty Hunters Science 296 5565 39 40 doi 10 1126 science 296 5565 39 PMID 11935003 S2CID 34952867 A tax may be taken as representative of those changes which may cause a general increase and a bounty as representative of those which may cause a general diminution in the normal supply price Alfred Marshall Principles of Economics 1890 and many subsequent editions V XIII 4 All of the action necessary to achieve a given ethical desideratum may take the form of lump sum taxes or bounties P A Samuelson Foundations of Economic Analysis 1947 p 245 Evers Joris July 25 2005 Offering a bounty for security bugs CNET CBS Interactive Retrieved August 12 2007 Mozilla Foundation Announces Security Bug Bounty Program Mozilla Foundation Mountain View California August 2 2004 Retrieved August 12 2007 AP Wire Bill Lester becomes first black Grand Am winner Oklahoman com The Oklahoman Retrieved February 4 2022 Mayer Matthew Chase Elliott collects bounty mocks Kyle Busch after winning NASCAR Truck Series Race at Charlotte CBSSPORTS COM VC Retrieved February 4 2022 NHRA COM NHRA Constant Aviation launch Factory Stock Showdown Bounty program NHRA COM NHRA Retrieved February 4 2022 Myerly Scott Hughes 1996 British Military Spectacle From the Napoleonic Wars Through the Crimea Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 53 54 ISBN 978 0 674 08249 6 The enlistment bounty never covered the cost of clothing and necessaries except during the French and Crimean wars so a recruit might enter the army in debt and not receive any pay for six months or more after enlistment Territorial Army to be renamed the Army Reserve BBC News Online BBC News October 14 2012 Retrieved August 2 2013 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Bounty Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bounty reward amp oldid 1106246033, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.