" . . . a currently popular view of proposition bets, the "prediction markets" 
view, often treats prop bets or idea futures as purely information-distribution 
mechanisms, with the only incentives supposed as the benign incentive to profit 
by adding useful information to the market. 
This fails to take into account the incentives such markets create to act 
differently outside the market.  A "prediction market" is always also one that 
changes incentives outside that market: a prediction market automatically 
creates parallel incentives to bring about the predicted event.
 For example a prediction market on a certain person's death is also an 
assassination market. 
Which is why a pre-Gulf-War-II DARPA-sponsored experimental "prediction market" 
included a prop bet on Saddam Hussein's death, but excluded such trading on any 
other, more politically correct world leaders. A sufficiently large market 
predicting an individual's death is also, necessarily, an assassination market, 
and similarly other "prediction" markets are also act markets, changing 
incentives to act outside that market to bring about the predicted events.

http://unenumerated.blogspot.com/2015/05/small-game-fallacies.html

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