Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has defended the inclusion of a Hezbollah betting section on Polymarket, a decentralized prediction platform.
In an article published October 1 on X, Buterin pointed out that many people, including elites, make harmful and inaccurate predictions about conflict on platforms like Twitter.
He argued that knowing whether people with a financial interest think an event has a 2 or 50 percent chance of happening offers valuable information. According to him, this helps maintain rationality in the face of misinformation.
According to him:
“It’s not about ‘(making) money from bad things,’ it’s about creating an environment where speech has consequences (so that unwarranted fear-mongering and unwarranted complacency are punished ), without relying on government or corporate censors.”
Polymarket’s Hezbollah-related markets allow users to bet on events like whether Israel will invade Lebanon within specific time frames, whether a ceasefire will take place or whether the US military will intervene this year. At press time, these markets had recorded a trading volume of over $7 million.
“Soft caps”
Meanwhile, Chainlink Community Liaison Zach Rynes raised concerns about the potential dangers of prediction markets, particularly when it comes to assassination betting. He suggested that large, suggestible markets could encourage real actions aimed at manipulating outcomes.
Buterin responded that he opposed such deals. It said it puts an end to situations where a market acts as a primary incentive for harmful actions, thereby enabling insider trading.
Rynes pointed out, however, that any prediction market on influenceable events could incentivize harmful actions if enough liquidity is involved.
“Even if it was not the original intention, highly liquid markets could subsidize the war,” Rynes argued. “Prediction markets are not passive observers: they can influence outcomes as they change. »
In response, Buterin proposed introducing soft caps on market size for platforms like Polymarket. He suggested implementing a fee structure that increases as market size approaches the cap, with all profits used to support socially beneficial markets with low organic volume.