Pop Sci outputs a flawed and biased explainer on prediction markets.

No GravatarPop Sci defends InTrade&#8217-s November 2006 record:

The betting site [*] intrade.com offered a security that would pay out $100 if the Republicans held their majority in the U.S. Senate and nothing if they lost. For weeks, it had been trading at around 70, reflecting the consensus view that there was a 70 percent chance that the Republicans would hold power. But as the results came in, the market—not the media—was first to smell the upset.

[*] InTrade-TradeSports is a real-money prediction exchange (betting exchange), not a &#8220-betting site&#8221-.

&#8212-

InTrade by Pop Sci
by Paul Wootton

Part of a long article explaining &#8220-the science behind&#8221- the Pop Sci prediction exchange.

A prediction market [**] is like a stock exchange [***], except people trade not stocks but predictions.

[**] a prediction exchange

[***] like a futures exchange

&#8212-

Pop Sci:

Offshore gaming sites [****] like intrade.com started offering nonsports gambling along with NFL and baseball futures.

[****] InTrade-TradeSports is a real-money prediction exchange (betting exchange), not a &#8220-gaming site&#8221-. And one of the best.

&#8212-

Pop Sci:

The best way to understand these types of &#8220-if/then&#8221- questions is to create a conditional market, also known as a decision market. [*****]

[*****] a decision-aid market &#8212- I would keep the &#8220-decision market&#8221- definition for the Robin Hanson concept, where the decision is executed as the market chose.

And, between me and you, I don&#8217-t get why a popular magazine would get into this arcane topic. There are many other sub-topics on prediction markets that are more urgent and important than decision markets or decision-aid markets.

&#8212-

Pop Sci:

[&#8230-] The trouble with these markets is in getting enough people to participate. [******] It&#8217-s legally precarious to set up a decision market in the U.S. (trading these propositions looks suspiciously like Internet gambling to some—although by those standards, so does investing in pork-belly futures). [*******] Most American ventures use play money, which surprisingly enough, generates predictions as accurate as those of real-money markets. [********] These fake-money markets need to attract traders by being entertaining, not by offering the possibility of riches. It&#8217-s no wonder the U.S. market with the most trades is the Hollywood Stock Exchange. Without the lure of real money to be made off other, perhaps less-savvy market participants, it&#8217-s hard to recruit enough traders into a decision market that creates insight into serious yet perhaps more mundane issues. But it can be done. We have the crystal ball at our fingertips. All that&#8217-s left is to look into it together.

[******] Hummm&#8230- No. The problematic is how to motivate enough the speculators (the sophisticated bettors) so that they perform the information aggregation work. Prediction markets should not have as ultimate goal to transform the whole Planet Earth&#8217-s population into traders, but to milk out the traders&#8217- passion and impulse so as to create profits and accurate market-generated predictions. You do that by offering a very sophisticated prediction exchange platform, which is not yet what Pop Sci has achieved.

[*******] I&#8217-d rather say, &#8220-speculating&#8221- on futures, than &#8220-investing&#8221-.

[********] Why not citing the best academic paper demonstrating this? Ah, it is authored by Emile Servan-Schreiber of NewsFutures, a competitor of the Hollywood Stock Exchange, which powers the Pop Sci prediction exchange. Pitiful.

Prediction Markets: Does Money Matter? – (PDF) – by Emile Servan-Schreiber, David Pennock, Justin Wolfers and Brian Galebach – 2004-09-00

&#8212-

The final line of the Pop Sci article:

Michael Moyer is the executive editor of Popular Science.

Flawed and biased explainer on prediction markets, in my judgment. Pitiful.

&#8212-

Previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • Is that HubDub’s Nigel Eccles on the bottom left of that UK WebMission pic?
  • Collective Error = Average Individual Error – Prediction Diversity
  • When gambling meets Wall Street — Proposal for a brand-new kind of finance-based lottery
  • The definitive proof that it’s presently impossible to practice prediction market journalism with BetFair.
  • The Absence of Teams In Production of Blog Journalism
  • Publish a comment on the BetFair forum, get arrested.
  • If I had to guess, I would say about 50 percent of the “name pros” you see on television on a regular basis have a negative net worth. Frightening, I know.

4 thoughts on “Pop Sci outputs a flawed and biased explainer on prediction markets.

  1. Jed Christiansen said:

    I know this post is a couple weeks old, but that is absolutely the most HORRIBLE chart I have ever seen in my life.

    It takes a lot of (anti-)talent to turn a chart into something that is in fact totally useless. Somehow the designer combined every known bit of chart-junk into one horrendous picture.

  2. Jed Christiansen said:

    I know this post is a couple weeks old, but that is absolutely the most HORRIBLE chart I have ever seen in my life.

    It takes a lot of (anti-)talent to turn a chart into something that is in fact totally useless. Somehow the designer combined every known bit of chart-junk into one horrendous picture.

Leave a Reply to Jed Christiansen Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *