There are three financial prediction exchanges in the tube.

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There are three financial prediction exchanges (betting exchanges) in the tube, in North America. All of them are in stealth mode.

Previous blog posts by Deep Throat:

  • Deep Throat on the idle Prediction Market Industry Association (PMIA)
  • IN-PLAY BETTING: BetFair is already compliant with the Gambling Commission’s first pointer.
  • Rumor Mill — Wednesday morning
  • Conference on Prediction Markets
  • How BetFair did treat its customers on the day that the BetFair Starting Price system crashed down
  • How BetFair markets are settled in the situation where their integrity team are unhappy about some aspect of the betting on that event
  • Who is behind the CFTC’s request?

ProTrade co-founder Jeff Ma gives inklings.

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ProTrade&#8217-s Jeff Ma:

[…] The book Moneyball was a great inspiration for starting PROTRADE. Mike Kerns (who is the real brains behind the PROTRADE idea) and I both read Moneyball and felt it changed our lives. Conceptually PROTRADE began as a way for players to trade athlete like they were stocks. The problem with that concept is it poses the question asked above: what’s the underlying value of the athlete? We launched with a very complicated “earnings” system that took into account how much a player helped his team win (the ultimate value of a player according to Moneyball) but had to abandon that due to its complicated nature for sports fans. Instead we shifted to an “earnings” system based on traditional statistics that everyone follows. So what our market is now is a predictive market based on one year “earnings” for athletes and teams. These “earnings” are based on traditional stats that fans follow already like home runs, or touchdowns or wins. As for the larger questions that people have posed above, I wonder if sports fans really know less about athletes than they do about publicly traded companies. If you compare the amount of information I know about Tiger Woods, Barry Bonds, Tom Brady to that of Larry Page, Meg Whitman or Bill Gates, I’d have to say I know a lot more about the former group but maybe that’s because I co-founded a [company] based in sports. Finally I challenge the notion that our sports financial instrument has less underlying value than say a weather derivative. Futures and commodities are often simply “bets” about whether an instrument is over or under valued by the market.

Previous: ProTrade = The Jock Exchange, the first public stock market that trades in professional athletes??.

Claude Allegre, Al Gore debunker

Claude Allegre debunks the first part of Al Gore&#8217-s documentary movie (the &#8220-catastrophism&#8221- part), and agrees with its second part (the &#8220-let&#8217-s use better technologies&#8221- part).

&#8220-Claude Allegre&#8221- at Google Search

Claude Allegre&#8217-s latest book (in French).

NEXT: An Inconvenient Truth &#8211- Al Gore’s movie

The many kinds of prediction market consultants

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There are at least two kinds of prediction market consultants, actually.

#1. The prediction market consultants (a la Emile Servan-Schreiber or Jed Christiansen or Alex Costakis) who help PM-interested executive/managers with the technicalities.

#2. The world-renowned consultants or economists (like Hal Varian or Robin Hanson or Steve Levitt or else) who are uniquely positioned to convince top executives about the social utility of prediction markets as an internal forecasting tool. They command respect in the business world, and mid-level managers can use their support to convince senior managers on setting up a corporate prediction exchange.

Do you, folks, agree with my quick nomenclature??

Space Odyssey - HAL

QUIZZ OF THE DAY: What was the name of the computer in that movie, Space Odyssey?

Previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • The CFTC is going to close the comments in 15 days. We have 15 days left to convince the CFTC to accept FOR-PROFIT prediction exchanges, and counter the evil petition organized by the American Enterprise Institute (which has on its payroll Paul Wolfowitz, the bright masterminder of the Iraq war).
  • The CFTC is going to close the comments in 16 days. We have 16 days left to convince the CFTC to accept FOR-PROFIT prediction exchanges, and counter the evil petition organized by the American Enterprise Institute (which has on its payroll Paul Wolfowitz, the bright masterminder of the Iraq war).
  • Brand-new scientific report certifies that starting off the Large Hadron Collider is NOT going to destroy the Earth. Glad to hear that. It means that any bets entertained on the LHC issue will be able to be resolved and winnings to be collected in the end.
  • Small Business = GOOD — Big Business = BAD
  • The letter David Pennock will never send out —well, we hope.
  • Monitor the web traffic of TradeSports.com, InTrade.com, BetFair.com, Betdaq.com, NewsFutures.com, HubDub.com, etc. —thanks to Google Trends.
  • Here’s the way to promote innovation for entry-order and analysis software packages —separate the 2 functions.

2006 North Korea Missile prediction market: a scandal signed TradeSports-InTrade

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Did BetFair mess the expiry of the 2006 US Senate prediction markets?&#8230- UK blogger Mike Smithson thinks so.

Anybody who had money on last November’s US MidTerms Senate market with Betfair will know what happens when the rules are not tied down tight enough. Then Betfair settled the election on the basis of a tie even though the actual outcome was that the Democrats took control of the Senate. Then the problem was the position of two senators who had not gone into the election as Democratic candidates but had said they would caucus with the [Democratic] party. An added complication for Betfair was that the Labour MP, Nick Palmer, had written to Betfair ahead of the election asking for clarification about Lieberman’s position and had received a written reply confirming that if he won he would be regarded as a Democrat. Palmer had posted this information of this site influencing, no doubt, a number of other punters in the process. […] [FYI, the rest of the story is on another alleged BetFair messing up.]

Chris Masse, circa November 2006:

[…] BetFair sticks with the ORIGINAL contract —as CLEARLY written ON DAY ONE on their “RULES” tab, and as understood correctly by everybody who can read plain English. NO SURPRISE, NO CONTROVERSY. &#8220-Which of these parties will have MORE SEATS in the US Senate following the 2006 US Senate Elections?&#8221- is a very different question than &#8220-Which of these parties will CONTROL the US Senate?&#8221-. There is no ambiguity in the first question. In the second question, it’s understood that you could control the US Senate with your allies (the Independents).

Now, let&#8217-s contrast that with the 2006 North Korea Missile scandal prompted by a TradeSports-InTrade mistake.

#1. John Delaney, CEO of the firm managing TradeSports-Intrade, acknowledged recently in writing that the poorly defined contract was their fault.

[…] We experienced an issue with our North Korean market definition. […]

#2. Nevertheless, the TradeSports-InTrade who were right on the outcome (i.e., who bet &#8220-yes&#8221- on whether North Korea would fire a missile) got screwed up and lost their money.

#3. TradeSports-InTrade did nothing to compensate the victims of its mistake.

#4. Only the bloggers (like Donald Luskin or Barry Ritholtz, alerted by Chris Masse) came to the rescue of the screwed-up traders. The main media were mum about this scandal. (Rachel King of BusinessWeek told me she asked the question to John Delaney, but, unfortunately, she did not have enough space in her news article to talk about that. Pffff&#8230- Pretext.)

#5. None of the prediction market scholars published a statement on the North Korea Missile controversy. The scholars are dependent on the three main prediction exchanges (BetFair, TradeSports-InTrade, Hollywood Stock Exchange, NewsFutures)&#8230-yeah, I know, I&#8217-ve listed four of them&#8230- but the &#8220-Three Musketeers&#8221- were four, too&#8230- anyway&#8230- my point is that the prediction market scholars are dependent on the data provided by the four main prediction exchanges (betting exchanges) to fuel their research, just like the heroin addicts are dependent on their dealer. The prediction market scholars will never, ever, ever, utter a word against the prediction exchanges. Remember: no prediction market data, no research, no academic career. The exception is Robin Hanson, who does not beg for data. The guy is a new institution designer (idea futures, decision markets, MSR, etc.).

#6. None of the prediction market commentators (whom you see blablating on this group blog and elsewhere) published a statement on the North Korea Missile controversy. The Midas Oracle readers should know that many of those fine blablaters have as a goal to get hired by one of the prediction exchanges (betting exchanges, futures exchanges). Of course, if you&#8217-re goal is to flatter exchange executives, then you won&#8217-t deliver the truth for your readers.

#7. John Delaney, CEO of the firm managing TradeSports-Intrade, insisted to let know to the general public (and the prediction market scholars) that Chris Masse lost $10,000.

#8. And I won&#8217-t mention the e-mail insults I received from Ireland.

#9. John Maloney, the mediocre, second-tier organizer of phone-booth, vendor micro-conferences (sponsored by TradeSports-InTrade) unleashed on Chris Masse, &#8220-the one-trick pony&#8221-.

#10. Contrary to BetFair, InTrade is unregulated in Ireland and TradeSports is unregulated in The Netherlands Antilles. It is thus impossible for the screwed-up traders to appeal to a higher authority. You will notice that the prediction market scholars, the bloggers and the journalists never mention this fact.

#11. Contrary to BetFair, both TradeSports and InTrade are not members of the Independent Betting Arbitration Service. It is thus impossible for the screwed-up traders to appeal to a higher authority. You will notice that the prediction market scholars, the bloggers and the journalists never mention this fact.

#12. Contrary to BetFair, both TradeSports and InTrade have a track record of screwing up traders. You will notice that the prediction market scholars and the journalists never mention this fact.

  • TradeSports — SportsBook Review rating: C+ (Scale: A+ to F-) — Bookmakers Review rating: 3.5 / 5
  • InTrade — SportsBook Review rating: C+ (Scale: A+ to F-) — Bookmakers Review rating: 3 / 5

#13. You will notice that when a big trader vents his frustration with TradeSports-InTrade (A Big Trader’s Open Letter to TradeSports-InTrade), the prediction market scholars, the bloggers and the journalists don&#8217-t follow up.

#14. You will also notice that when TradeSports-InTrade obviously screws up a prediction market (InTrade-TradeSports – Next Major Sportsbook to Withdraw from US), the prediction market scholars, the bloggers and the journalists don&#8217-t utter a word.

#15. Contrary to BetFair, both TradeSports and InTrade do not have a responsible gambling program. You will notice that the prediction market scholars, the bloggers and the journalists never mention this fact.

&#8212-

CFM and Midas Oracle tell the full truth on the prediction markets: the bright side AND the dark side. THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT.

The Los Angeles Times would legalize BetFair and TradeSports-InTrade.

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As far as I know, it&#8217-s the second LAT &#8220-editorial&#8221- asking for the legalization of internet gambling and betting (and speculating). Via Sir Niall O&#8217-Connor.

Anybody knows of another media that has published pro-internet gambling editorials??

(((An &#8220-editorial&#8221- is usually anonymous and speaks for the media as a whole, as opposed to a column or an op-ed, each of which speaks only for its writer(s).)))

GOOGLERY: Bo Cowgills Boss misunderstands the Wisdom of Crowds.

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Google CEO Eric Schmidt:

[…] The book Wisdom of Crowds (by James Surowiecki) says that you have to have two things to make better decisions in groups. One is you need a deadline, which someone &#8212- at the end of the day is me or some external factor, and the second is that you need a dissident. There needs to be one person who will sit there in the room and say I disagree, and then the person next to him or her will say, &#8220-Well, yeah.&#8221- See, everyone waits for the first person to be the dissident, and then they pile on, and that&#8217-s how you have a healthy argument. […]

James Surowiecki:

Under what circumstances is the crowd smarter?

There are four key qualities that make a crowd smart. It needs to be diverse, so that people are bringing different pieces of information to the table. It needs to be decentralized, so that no one at the top is dictating the crowd&#8217-s answer. It needs a way of summarizing people&#8217-s opinions into one collective verdict. And the people in the crowd need to be independent, so that they pay attention mostly to their own information, and not worrying about what everyone around them thinks.

Question To Bo Cowgill: Would you mind releasing the transcript of your speech at Yahoo! confab?

UPDATE: He does not mind. :)

Previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • Become “friend” with me on Google E-Mail so as to share feed items with me within Google Reader.
  • Nigel Eccles’ flawed “vision” about HubDub shows that he hasn’t any.
  • How does InTrade deal with insider trading?
  • Modern Life
  • “The Beacon” is an excellent blog published by The Independent Institute.
  • The John Edwards Non-Affair… is making Memeorandum (twice), again.
  • Prediction Markets = marketplaces for information trading… and for separating the wheat from the chaff.

FT Predict = play-money InTrade by the Financial Times

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FT Predict – (ftpredict.com)

About FT Predict ™:

FT Predict™ is more than just a game. Predictive [*] markets collect the wisdom of the crowd* in a single dynamic price unit that can be far more sensitive to changes in the market than standard survey-based research. And a growing number of today&#8217-s leading companies embrace predictive market models in order to harness the wisdom of their own crowds to improve decision-making. Still, the fun part is playing the game and keeping up on what&#8217-s important to you at the same time. And if you like to play, we&#8217-ll keep playing.
We hope FT Predict interests you. Tell us what you think!
Looking for more information on Predictive Markets? Wikipedia&#8217-s entry is a good place to start.
* James Surroweicki&#8217-s book, The Wisdom of Crowds, offers insights into the dynamics behind predictive markets and why they work&#8230-and why sometimes they don&#8217-t.

[*] not &#8220-predictive markets&#8221-: prediction markets, please. (ALL markets are predictive.)

#1. Why not the full range of play-money contracts organized by TradeSports-InTrade (including the sports)?

#2. InTrade should unveil the purpose of its automated market maker. Here&#8217-s why. If there&#8217-s a linkage between the real-money contract prices and the play-money contract &#8220-prices&#8221-, then it might not be fun to trade on FT Predict with the hope of using the real-money InTrade prediction markets as advanced indicators. If the machine gives the right prices right away, then what would be the motivation to correct the prices?

Any comment, folks?

Addendum: What about the deal between Reuters and InTrade, as alleged by Deep Throat? Is that still on the front burner?

Addendum #2: I got Will Speck (FT&#8217-s R&amp-D director for the Americas) on the phone real quick&#8230-

a) FT Predict is a play-money prediction exchange (betting exchange) that will reward its best traders. Time period of the contest: April to June 2007. Current top prize is a cruise trip for two persons.

b) The aim of The Financial Times is really to go global with this play-money prediction exchange (betting exchange). Currently, FT Predict is only for US residents, over 21, and physically present in the U.S. They will propose the game to other countries later on.

c) There&#8217-s indeed a link between FT Predict and the real-money Intrade prices, in the form of an automated market maker. Its purpose is only to start off the exchange- the aim is to have 100% organic volume as soon as possible.

Addendum #3: Other info I found on the Official Rules page&#8230-

[…] You will receive an account with a starting balance of 10,000 FT$ to use to make trades. […] You may choose as many or as few of the approximately 250 contracts to trade each week using the available FT$ in your account. To simulate actual futures trading, a transaction fee of 0.05 FT$ per share will be charged for each trade you make. […]

To &#8220-simulate&#8221-??? To get play-money traders accustomed to the configurations of a real-money prediction exchange, rather. The idea here, maybe, is to offer a free version of a betting exchange in the hope of converting prospects into real-money traders, later on.

Addendum #4: One last thought. FT Predict gives weight to CDA in its battle against MSR.

ENTREPRENEURSHIP and MARKETING

No GravatarYou Tube streaming video (Feb. 2007): Larry Page speaks at the AAAS (The American Association for the Advancement of Science)

Larry Page - AAAS

by CNET

Larry Page&#8217-s main advice to the scientists in the room: take their scientific studies, market them better and make them readily accessible to the world.

– CNET: Google&#8217-s Page urges scientists to market themselves.

&#8220-Most of the works you guys have done are not represented in those searches. We have to unlock the wealth of scientific knowledge and get it to everyone. I don&#8217-t care what we do, but we need to do something,&#8221- he said. [&#8230-]

– Attila Chordash: Google’s Larry Page at the AAAS meeting: entrepreneurship and unlocking in science.

“Science has a really serious marketing problem and nobody pays attention to that since none of the marketers work for science. If all the growth in world is due to science and technology and no one pays attention to you, then you have a serious marketing problem.” [&#8230-]

&#8220-You need to have the right attitude about it, and you need to think that business and entrepreneurship are important parts of science.” [&#8230-]

– Richard Brandt: Larry Page at AAAS

Most importantly, he wants scientists to &#8220-try to change the world.&#8221- That means not just doing research in their labs, but taking control of and trying to commercialize their technologies. It worked for him. [&#8230-]

Google&#8217-s Larry Page&#8217-s set of advice given in a speech at &#8220-Triple A S&#8221- (AAAS) also applies to scholars and experts in the field of prediction markets.

&#8212-

Chris Masse&#8217-s advice (if I may):

#1. Publish as HTML or XHTML files with informative titles and URLs (as opposed to the bad, non-usable PDF files).

#2. Participate in popular group blogs (as opposed to publishing on individual blogs read by nobody) and, from there, link to your other files.

#3. Publicize your site feed, so people can subscribe to it and automatically receive updates (via their feed reader).

#4. Create your internet network and, once a quarter, e-mail them your most important URL.

#5. Help popular bloggers unearthing good stories, in the long-term hope of getting linked to, as an appreciation for your little aiding and abetting.

#6. Monitor how the main search engines rank your postings with some webmaster tools, try hard to understand the damn whole mechanism, and take action to improve the search engine results on your name or works.

#7. If possible, always favor free, open-source software, like FireFox, Open Office, Word Press or Compozer / Nvu.

#8. Own your vanity domain name (e.g., robinhanson.com, as opposed to a sub-website owned by somebody else, like hanson.gmu.edu) and, from there, link to all the other webspots (e.g., Robin Hanson&#8217-s profile page at Midas Oracle) where you publish your ideas.

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.