The prediction market has recently encountered a major development. New York State Assemblymember Ritchie Torres introduced a new bill last Friday—the "2026 Financial Prediction Market Public Integrity Act." This proposal immediately garnered support from over 30 Democratic lawmakers, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
The core logic of the bill is straightforward: prohibit government personnel (officials, appointees, administrative staff, congressional staff) from using non-public information obtained through their positions to bet on policy directions and political outcomes in prediction markets. In other words, it aims to close the loophole that allows power to be exploited for personal gain.
This proposal did not come out of nowhere. Recently, a Polymarket user made $400,000 by betting that Venezuelan President Maduro would step down at the end of the month. This directly hit the market's nerve—could someone be using insider information to exploit prediction markets? If even government insiders can operate this way, the fairness of prediction markets would be fundamentally compromised.
Torres also made a clear statement: this loophole must be closed, or else some individuals might manipulate policies for personal financial gain, turning prediction markets into tools for monetizing power. Currently, the bill is still seeking support from Republicans, and its future depends on the attitudes of both parties.
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Token_Sherpa
· 01-09 19:10
ngl, insider trading with non-public info is the oldest playbook... predicting markets just made it easier to trace. wonder if they'll actually enforce this or if it's just theater for the headlines lol
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down_only_larry
· 01-09 17:58
The insider is cutting the leeks; it should have been dealt with long ago. I'm just worried that in the end, it will be all talk and no action.
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NotSatoshi
· 01-09 17:57
Once this $400,000 deal is exposed, they will be panicked, really.
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SchrodingerWallet
· 01-09 17:53
Haha, making 400,000 USD so easily, insider information is really valuable.
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MEVHunterWang
· 01-09 17:50
This is incredible. The government insider finally plans to crack down on the "cutting leeks" scheme, but I bet five bucks this bill won't pass haha
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HodlVeteran
· 01-09 17:33
Alright, now it's out in the open—the insiders exploiting the system have been exposed. As a seasoned veteran, I was killed by this kind of information gap back in the day. Now, legislation is being introduced to plug the loopholes, but it's too late.
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ILCollector
· 01-09 17:30
Basically, politicians are starting to get scared. Predictive markets hit the nerve of power.
The prediction market has recently encountered a major development. New York State Assemblymember Ritchie Torres introduced a new bill last Friday—the "2026 Financial Prediction Market Public Integrity Act." This proposal immediately garnered support from over 30 Democratic lawmakers, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
The core logic of the bill is straightforward: prohibit government personnel (officials, appointees, administrative staff, congressional staff) from using non-public information obtained through their positions to bet on policy directions and political outcomes in prediction markets. In other words, it aims to close the loophole that allows power to be exploited for personal gain.
This proposal did not come out of nowhere. Recently, a Polymarket user made $400,000 by betting that Venezuelan President Maduro would step down at the end of the month. This directly hit the market's nerve—could someone be using insider information to exploit prediction markets? If even government insiders can operate this way, the fairness of prediction markets would be fundamentally compromised.
Torres also made a clear statement: this loophole must be closed, or else some individuals might manipulate policies for personal financial gain, turning prediction markets into tools for monetizing power. Currently, the bill is still seeking support from Republicans, and its future depends on the attitudes of both parties.