Bounty: What It Means, How It Works, FAQs

What Is a Bounty?

The term bounty refers to a sum of money paid by a government or business entity to reward certain activities or behavior. The goal of a bounty is to reach an economic goal or to solve a problem. Bounties are often used to help track criminals and criminal activity. They can also be used to boost and encourage development in specific industries and sectors of the economy.

Key Takeaways

  • A bounty is a sum of money paid by governments or businesses to reward certain behavior.
  • Bounties are commonly paid to track criminals and criminal activity.
  • Bounty programs are used by coin developers in the cryptocurrency market to incentivize actions before the initial coin offering.
  • Bug bounty programs are offered by websites and organizations by which coders are incentivized to detect and report bugs, particularly those related to security weaknesses.
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission uses a bounty program, or "Whistleblower Program," that encourages individuals to report securities law violations.

Understanding a Bounty

As noted above, a bounty refers to a monetary reward or financial incentive paid for by governments and companies in exchange for certain actions or behaviors. For instance, governments may pay people bounties to track criminals and illegal activities. Some governments might offer a bounty or a subsidy to an individual who enlists in that country's armed forces.

Bounties may also come in the form of grants. These are typically paid for by governments to encourage players in certain industries. They can also be paid as subsidies to incentivize entrepreneurs in the market. As such, bounties and related economic awards are commonly found in the cryptocurrency market and the technology sector, where entities are paid to track and combat hackers.

The top five public bounty programs include Intel, Yahoo!, Snapchat, Cisco, and Dropbox.

Bounties and Cryptocurrencies

Bounty programs are commonly used by coin developers in the cryptocurrency market to incentivize actions before the initial coin offering (ICO). A bounty program gives rewards or tokens to those who undertake specific tasks to promote the ICO. There are two stages during which individuals can be compensated:

  • The Pre-ICO Stage: Social media influencers, bloggers, and digital marketers promote the ICO on their platforms and receive compensation based on the amount of audience engagement. Meanwhile, developers often receive bounties in the form of tokens for their part in coding the project.
  • The Post-ICO Stage: Bounties are used to incentivize programmers to detect bugs and provide feedback on other issues. These are called bug bounties, as coders are rewarded to specifically test for flaws in the system.

An ICO is the crypto equivalent of an initial public offering (IPO). Unlike an IPO, which gives an ownership stake to those who buy shares, the coins in an ICO don't always result in equity ownership.

Bug Bounties

Bug bounty programs are offered by websites and organizations where coders are incentivized to detect and report bugs, particularly those related to security weaknesses. These programs are designed to find and fix bugs before the greater public is aware of them and prevent large-scale hacking abuse. Organizations can leverage the power of a large group of coders and hackers.

Several technology giants use bug bounties, including:

Wall Street firms like Goldman Sachs (GS) and the United States Department of Defense also have bug bounty programs in place.

Bounties and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) uses a bounty program, officially called its Whistleblower Program. This program incentivizes whistleblowers to report possible securities law violations.

Whistleblowers help the SEC identify possible fraud and other violations, limiting damage to investors. The SEC is authorized to provide monetary rewards for those who report high-quality information that leads to an enforcement action in which over $1,000,000 in sanctions is ordered. The range of rewards is between 10% and 30% of the money collected.

The program also provides protection against retaliation to anyone who submits a tip. Whistleblowers can file a complaint in federal court if they feel that their employer has retaliated against them. If courts side with them, whistleblowers may seek restitution in the form of double back pay, reinstatement, attorney's fees, and other costs.

The SEC said it surpassed the $1 billion mark in whistleblower awards in September 2021.

Bounties and Subsidies

There are different types of bounties and subsidies that are paid to industries and taxpayers in the United States. For instance:

A bounty or subsidy can help industries invest in capital equipment designed to better the country or reach a desired outcome like cleaner-burning fuel. For instance, the coal, nuclear, wind, solar, oil, and gas industries all receive subsidies or bounties from the U.S. government each year.

What Is the Highest Bounty Paid By the SEC?

In October of 2020, the SEC announced a record award of $114 million, consisting of about $52 million from the SEC and roughly $62 million from another agency. The next highest award is $50 million made to an individual in June 2020.

Where Did Crypto Bounty Programs Originate?

Bounty programs have their origins in the digital video gaming world and perks are offered to gamers who help with game development, specifically those that identify bugs in the game.

What Skills Are Required to Be a Bug Bounty?

Software and computer technical skills like the fundamentals of inter-networking, IP addresses, MAC addresses, OSI stack, and TCP/IP stack are among the skills required to be a bug bounty.

The Bottom Line

A bounty is paid by a government or business entity to reward certain activities to solve a problem. The SEC pays bounties through its whistleblower program and in the world of cryptocurrency, bounty programs are used by coin developers to incentivize activity before an initial coin offering.

Article Sources
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  1. Guru99. "TOP Bug Bounty Programs & Websites List (Apr 2023 Update)."

  2. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "Welcome."

  3. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "Whistleblower Protections."

  4. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "SEC Surpasses $1 Billion in Awards to Whistleblowers with Two Awards Totaling $114 Million."

  5. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "SEC Issues Record $114 Million Whistleblower Award."

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