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strangattractor | 1 month ago
Isn't the entire Polymarket concept rife with ways to abuse the system? If I have insider knowledge I get shills to create a market for that knowledge - then make an extreme bet at the last moment. Seems sort of like betting the 49ers will not win the Super Bowl because you know that Purdy's kneecaps are about to be busted. Or large options trades the day before the Senate votes on Healthcare bills.
stubish|1 month ago
dTal|1 month ago
danny_codes|1 month ago
It’s not great for the gambling addicts but helping people better themselves doesn’t seem to be a theme in federal policy at the moment
zzbzq|1 month ago
Further, "insider trading" in prediction markets is probably fundamentally illegal under existing commodities fraud laws in the US (I am not a lawyer,) but there's probably nobody actively policing it, and probably no precedent in how to prosecute the cases.
gosub100|1 month ago
- throttle how much a new account can wager, allowing more to be placed after the account gets older
- limit double-down bets to some fraction of your initial. To reduce the benefit of last minute wagers
- end wagering at a random time before the deadline.
- ban accounts that act in concert to evade the throttling. Or charge a hefty one-time fee or escrow that you eventually get refunded
wiml|1 month ago
justinclift|1 month ago
That may be the case, but the US clearly does have control over the land, as they're literally telling Venezuela what to do with it.
That the US skipped a few steps of deploying troops on the same land first doesn't really seem to be here or there.
morshu9001|1 month ago
cyanydeez|1 month ago
Unfortunately, it's pretty easy to see something, eventually, like "X won't be seen in public after December 31st, 2026" essentially creating an assassination market.
Basically, boil finance bros down to sociopathy.
NedF|1 month ago
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