Transparency is the best policy.
Prediction Markets as Honor Traps: Exposing Insider Trading Through Automated Transparency By Brian Higgins The Problem: When Intelligence Becomes a Game Social critics often argue that prediction markets turn national security into a game, inadvertently incentivizing terrorism by allowing players to profit from specific outcomes. They fear that participants, driven by financial interest, might manipulate events to ensure their bets win. However, this critique overlooks a critical flaw in the logic: major actors are not interested in making "good bets"; they are interested in making decisions. A point spread offers little utility to those who “call the shots,” anyway. The true value of prediction markets lies not in forecasting, but in forensic exposure. They act as a digital "honey trap" designed to catch front-runners—individuals who exploit privileged, confidential information to place winning trades before public announcements. The Ethical Premise: Honor and Tra...