Insider trading is a big problem. But how do you protect against it?
A Polymarket user named "NOTHINGEVERFRICKINGHAPPENS" was suspiciously lucky once, and clearly thinks they're about to get lucky again.
It would be a bipartisan action at a very partisan time.
Polymarket's latest in-person publicity stunt opens Friday, and it sounds a lot like drinking in an airport.
"There are clearly individuals in the White House who are making money off of when the United States goes to war or not,” Sen. Murphy said.
That's not how being right works, guys.
The Oscars will be streaming for the first time on Hulu this year.
Join the club, guys.
The prediction market platform recenlty pulled trades on the probablibly of a nuclear weapon being denotated.
One user made roughly half a million in one day.
Apparently the paycheck isn't enough.
Someone clearly wants the public to believe Trump will speak for more than two hours.
The Trump administration is going to bat for a hands-off approach to the explosion of gambling in America.
Perhaps we could stop and ask why you can bet on military operations in the first place.
Here's a prediction: this ends poorly.
Polymarket and Kalshi try to appeal to New Yorkers as regulatory scrutiny intensifies.
Easy money.
The awards show is teaming up with a controversial prediction marketplace that is facing growing scrutiny over insider trading concerns.
Some people have all the luck.
Prediction market observers have long warned that the business is ripe for insider trading.