Bob Hahn turns the PETITION into a CONSENSUS.

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Bob Hahn turns lead into gold.

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Via Google&#8217-s Bo Cowgill, Robert Hahn and Paul Tetlock&#8217-s Op-Ed in the Wall Street Journal (mirror at AEI-Brookings – mirror at AEI):

[…] These markets often predict more accurately than experts. Why? They draw on the knowledge of people who might otherwise be ignored. Their anonymity frees participants from pressures to agree with opinion leaders. And they create straightforward profit incentives that encourage participants to search for better information. […] A consensus plan, endorsed by more than 20 leading researchers, including Nobel economics laureates Kenneth Arrow, Daniel Kahneman, Thomas Schelling, and Vernon Smith, and published by the AEI-Brookings Joint Center, suggests the creation of a safe harbor for small-stakes, not-for-profit prediction markets to encourage experimentation. One could, for example, introduce exemptions for research-focused markets in which the size of individual investments does not exceed $2,000 per participant. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) could provide this safe harbor in the form of a &#8220-no-action&#8221- letter. Alternatively, the commission could create formal guidelines that make it cheaper and easier to start these markets. […] Prediction markets have become more than fodder for television news features on what those zany Internet folks will think of next. They are coming of age as serious tools for information gathering and analysis &#8212- tools with great potential for improving the efficiency of government and the productivity of industry. To help achieve that potential, Washington needs to nurture their development and keep them from becoming collateral damage in the endless war over who can gamble and where.

Step #1: Make some gullible economists sign a &#8220-petition&#8221-, entirely engineered by Bob Himself, and which is flawed and too timid.

Step #2: Make the gullible Wall Street Journal readers believe that a &#8220-no-action letter&#8221- is the solution, claiming that that&#8217-s the &#8220-consensus&#8221-.

Robin Hanson, who is at heart a free-gambling-for-all economist, took part of this pitiful farce. Bad judgment, doc. If Robin Hanson wants to stay the &#8220-reigning expert&#8221- of the field of prediction markets, he will have to mind a more pertinent industry analysis in the future. Viva Steve Levitt.

Previous: Steve Levitt of Freakonomics: I WON’T SIGN YOUR PETITION, BOB. + Chris Masse’s comment on the Freakonomics’ blog post about the legality of US prediction markets + Safe Harbor Letter too Timid – by Chris Hibbert + The limitations of logic (and the need for passion) – by Caveat Bettor + Jason Ruspini on the Economists’ Petition

The Hollywood Stock Exchange in the news

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Rolling In The (Virtual) Dough – The Hollywood Stock Exchange Is Played By Gamers And Movie Lovers Alike – 2007-05-11

[…] With 25,000 hits a day, HSX is the Internet&#8217-s leading virtual market and a burgeoning source for big-studio market research. […]

Hmmmm&#8230- The Midas Oracle .ORG server web stats says this:

Analyzed requests from Fri, Sep 15 2006 at 8:23 AM to Thu, May 10 2007 at 12:37 AM (236.68 days).
Figures in parentheses refer to the 7-day period ending May 10 2007 at 4:47 AM.

Successful requests: 4,058,317 (208,537)
Average successful requests per day: 17,147 (29,790)
Successful requests for pages: 1,340,229 (59,991)
Average successful requests for pages per day: 5,662 (8,570)
Failed requests: 12,009 (2)
Redirected requests: 71,241 (225)
Data transferred: 51.59 gigabytes (2.39 gigabytes)
Average data transferred per day: 223.20 megabytes (349.99 megabytes)

The &#8220-hits&#8221- or &#8220-requests&#8221- are not what you should look for. If you have many images on your webpages, sure you&#8217-ll have a high number of &#8220-hits&#8221-. The &#8220-pageviews&#8221- count is what will give you info on users&#8217- behavior.

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[…] But Anita Elberse, an assistant professor who teaches marketing at Harvard Business School, estimates that, on average, HSX closing prices come within 16 percent of box office receipts. […]

Congrats to Alex Costakis and Amy Lamare (and the HSX traders). :)

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[…] Recently, the site has started to tinker with its 10-year-old formula. Once limited to MovieStocks, users can now purchase &#8220-Hollywood Derivatives&#8221- to predict the success of their favorite World Cup soccer team, American Idol contestant or Academy Awards nominee. (In 2005, HSX users correctly guessed all eight Oscar winners.) The point, says Costakis, is to create a &#8220-testing ground&#8221- for future additions to the site, which could include full-time sports options and TV stocks. […]

Looking forward to this. :)

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Psstt&#8230- See what they say about the HSX leagues on the last page.

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