|
|
|
|
|
by jychang
258 days ago
|
|
> Why would we protect willing participants betting on arbitrary events? Because some information affects the stock market. So Regulation FD already applies, for financial news. > Even if we ban on this one too The UK already banned this, see other comment above in this thread. > insideinformationverywelcomemarket You might as well as cut out the middleman, don't call it a "market" anymore, and just call it "crowdfunded-will-pay-reward-for-insider-information-website". Or, basically a crowdfunded TMZ. TMZ will pay thousands of dollars for non-financial info on celebs and then publish that news. That that point, you're just describing a slightly classier crowdfunded TMZ. |
|
Sure, but that has everything to do with what information you are allowed to make public, not with whether you should be allowed to bet on arbitrary other markets.
> You might as well as cut out the middleman, don't call it a "market" anymore, and just call it "crowdfunded-will-pay-reward-for-insider-information-website". [...]
The commodities markets in the US used to have no prohibition on insider trading until fairly recently. They still called it a market.