
The post Can Prediction Markets Turn Dangerous? Vitalik Buterin Weighs In appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin is weighing in on a growing debate surrounding prediction markets, drawing a clear line between what he views as useful and what he considers dangerous.
The discussion unfolded after Buterin defended prediction markets as a better way to measure uncertainty than social media or even traditional financial markets. His core argument: prediction markets reward accuracy, not loud opinions.
βOn social media, lots of people talk about βTHIS WAR WILL DEFINITELY HAPPENβ and scare people,β Buterin wrote. βWith prediction markets, if you make a dumb bet, you lose.β
Why Vitalik Says Prediction Markets Get a Bad Rap
Critics often argue that prediction markets could incentivize harmful behavior by allowing people to profit from disasters. Buterin pushed back, saying those risks already exist, and at much larger scale, in traditional markets.
βMany of the downsides of PMs are replicated by regular stock markets,β he said, noting that equities and other financial instruments offer far more liquidity for anyone trying to profit from chaos.
In contrast, prediction markets force people to back their beliefs with money. Over time, wrong views get filtered out. Prices reflect probabilities, not certainty β something Buterin says helps him personally stay calm when headlines turn sensational.
Will Markets Shape Reality?
The debate intensified after a user suggested that highly liquid prediction markets could eventually stop predicting outcomes and start shaping them. With enough capital, they argued, markets could βprogram reality to follow the market.β
Buterin didnβt agree and said that future worries him.
βI actually consider that one of the danger cases,β he responded.
Where Vitalik Draws the Line
According to Buterin, markets that shape reality tend to benefit large players over small ones. Governments, corporations, and whales can move outcomes, but regular users canβt. That imbalance already exists in traditional finance, and itβs often harmful.
Prediction markets, he argued, are safer precisely because theyβre smaller.
Their size limits their influence. Prices stay bounded between 0 and 1, reducing bubbles, manipulation, and βgreater foolβ dynamics.
βThey are much less dominated by reflexivity effects,β he said, calling them βhealthierβ than regular markets.

2 months ago
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