Prediction Markets Let You Bet on Anything. That's a Problem
Key takeaways
- In late May, federal authorities charged a Google software engineer with insider trading after he won $1.2 million on the prediction-market website Polymarket.
- The popularity of prediction markets, where you can bet on thousands of real-world outcomes across nearly every facet of modern life, is spreading faster than governments can keep up.
- You may have even been tempted yourself to put down cash on your favorite pop-culture hunch.
In late May, federal authorities charged a Google software engineer with insider trading after he won $1.2 million on the prediction-market website Polymarket. The 36-year-old Michele Spagnuolo allegedly placed bets that musician D4vd and rapper Kendrick Lamar would top Google's most-searched list. The bets paid off, prosecutors said, because Spagnuolo had access to confidential company data.
The popularity of prediction markets, where you can bet on thousands of real-world outcomes across nearly every facet of modern life, is spreading faster than governments can keep up. Even Mark Zuckerberg, Meta's chief executive, is reportedly developing a standalone prediction market app to compete with the most popular platforms, Kalshi and Polymarket.
You may have even been tempted yourself to put down cash on your favorite pop-culture hunch. But the recent Google case highlights just one of the biggest concerns for a multibillion-dollar industry prone to abuse. Numerous insider trading cases have prompted federal regulators to intensify scrutiny, cracking down on the illegal use of classified information for betting.