Changes to Midas Oracle

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  1. Anyone can comment &#8212-no need to be a registered member. It has been working fine. Spammers have been kept at bay by the math test. (They can&#8217-t count, apparently. :-D )
  2. Anyone can register himself/herself to become a member. A math test will deter spammers.
  3. The last part of some of my posts will be seen only by registered members &#8212-at times. You&#8217-ll be told to login or register to see the full post.
  4. I will send out an e-mail newsletter to the registered members &#8212-at times. This will be performed directly from the Midas Oracle system. Your e-mail addresses won&#8217-t be shared with an external service.

Meta Links:

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That&#8217-s what you&#8217-ll see at the top of the sidebar:

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Once logged in, here&#8217-s what you&#8217-ll see:

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Read the previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • TechCrunch is 221 times bigger than Midas Oracle.
  • Earthquake measuring 9.0 or more on Richter scale to occur anywhere on or before December 31, 2008
  • Why Midas Oracle (and not TV news shows or print newspapers) will dominate the future.
  • The Six Degrees Of Separation
  • Alpha Thesis
  • Meet Michael Arrington of TechCrunch.
  • Hedge your taxes –and forecast them too.

Getting from Collective Intelligence to Collective Action

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I really enjoyed attending the Collective Intelligence FOO Camp, sponsored by Google and O&#8217-Reilly Media, last weekend. I&#8217-d been expecting a sort of geek slumber party, and had looked forward to rolling out my awesome Darth Vader impersonation. I was all set to cut loose with a growling, &#8220-I&#8217-m your father, Luke.&#8221- It didn&#8217-t quite come to that, but I still had a blast, meeting lots of smart, informed, articulate, creative, and successful people. Friendly people, too.

I described how to establish the legality of real money, open-access prediction markets under U.S. law. I called my presentation, Getting from Collective Intelligence to Collective Action [PPT file]. In very brief, I proposed this algorithm:

  1. Set up an enterprise prediction market, make playing it a condition of continued employment, and offer valuable prizes to the best predictors.
  2. Set up a limited access prediction market, hire a number of independent contractors researchers to play it, pay them a relatively low salary for doing so, and offer valuable prizes to the best predictors.
  3. Set up an open-access prediction market but require anyone playing it to go through a click-wrap license that creates the sort of independent researcher relationship described at step 2, above.

When and if standing for declaratory judgment obtains, a litigation team should bring suit seeking to establish the legality of the prediction market under U.S. law. The market should be run by a worthy institution and deal only in claims likely to generate large positive externalities. Google.org, for example, might set up a market in earthquake claims and ask for a court&#8217-s blessing.

That strategy would stand a fair chance&#8211-a 75% chance, I&#8217-d say&#8211-of establishing the legality of a great many in-house and (effectively) public prediction markets under U.S. law. The strategy would not impose great costs or risks, though it would take some careful planning and execution, and would almost certainly generate large private and public goods. It might even save lives- we could really use a reliable early-warning system for major earthquakes.

This legalization program would most directly benefit subsidized markets- it would not plainly establish the legality of markets where traders could invest their own funds or hedge against off-market risks. I&#8217-m still working out a legal hack for that step. It will be an easier step to take, however, if we&#8217-ve already made it as far as establishing the legality of open-access, real money prediction markets under U.S. law.

We should still pursue other routes to establishing the legality of prediction markets under U.S. law, of course. It already helps that so many U.S. residents evidently make and lose money on Ireland-based InTrade. That at least goes to show that prediction markets hurt nobody. Getting the CFTC to issue safe-harbor regulations would help, too. All of those routes to public, real money prediction markets in the U.S. merit exploration. Any of them might offer a shortcut to a better, freer future.

[Posted at Agoraphilia, The Technology Liberation Front, and Midas Oracle.]

Donald Luskin outputs a bad explainer on prediction markets.

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Firstly, I&#8217-d like to say that I respect Donald Luskin as a Wall Street professional and as a libertarian blogger. But I think that his explainer is too simplistic.

Not a single word on the concept of probabilistic prediction:

The financial incentive to get it right, and the ability to draw on bettors from around the world &#8212- anyone who might have any information on whatever proposition is being bet on &#8212- is what gives these markets their uncanny predictive power.

Mixing prediction markets (a reality) with decision markets (a utopia):

Economics professor Robin Hanson, who has studied prediction markets extensively, told me he envisions a &#8220-futarchy&#8221- &#8212- government by futures contracts traded in a prediction market.

Claiming that these information aggregation mechanisms (the prediction markets) will supplant the advanced indicators which they feed on:

Today prediction markets are threatening to replace political polling &#8212- they&#8217-re certainly doing a better job. Tomorrow, who knows? Prediction markets might replace politics itself.

My readers will prefer the Midas Oracle explainer on prediction markets.

Michael Gerber – The E-Myth Revisited

No GravatarRight-click on his picture, open the link in another browser tab, and read his interesting interview.

Michael Gerber

Read the previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • TechCrunch is 221 times bigger than Midas Oracle.
  • Earthquake measuring 9.0 or more on Richter scale to occur anywhere on or before December 31, 2008
  • Why Midas Oracle (and not TV news shows or print newspapers) will dominate the future.
  • The Six Degrees Of Separation
  • Alpha Thesis
  • Meet Michael Arrington of TechCrunch.
  • Hedge your taxes –and forecast them too.

BetFair on Nine OClock News 2007-10-10

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Read the previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • TechCrunch is 221 times bigger than Midas Oracle.
  • Earthquake measuring 9.0 or more on Richter scale to occur anywhere on or before December 31, 2008
  • Why Midas Oracle (and not TV news shows or print newspapers) will dominate the future.
  • The Six Degrees Of Separation
  • Alpha Thesis
  • Meet Michael Arrington of TechCrunch.
  • Hedge your taxes –and forecast them too.