Conditional and Combinatorial Betting

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After people have used Prediction Markets for a while and have gotten used to their ability to provide forecasts, they start thinking about different scenarios. Who would be the best Republican to face Clinton? How are the prospects for a market boom or crash effected by the winner of the election? How will poverty be affected by a proposed World Bank program? These kinds of questions can be posed in a number of ways using Prediction Markets. Markets can allow betting on conditional (if) or conjunctive (and) questions. Either one can be used to answer the what if questions, but they provide different choices to the bettors, and some make it easier for observers to decode the answers.

The easiest compound question to pose is a simple conjunction of two others. InTrade had separate markets in whether Bush would be reelected in 2004 (&#8221-BUSH&#8221-), and whether Osama bin Laden (&#8221-OSAMA&#8221-) would be captured before the election. Justin Wolfers and Eric Zitzewitz asked InTrade to add a single combined contract that would pay off if both came true. Their paper, Experimental Political Betting Markets and the 2004 Election shows how the prices on these three contracts can be combined to show how one event would be likely to effect the other.

InTrade created three separate claims to cover combinations of the two base questions. They were &#8220-Bush wins election&#8221- (BUSH), &#8220-Osama is captured before the election&#8221- (OSAMA), and the combination: BUSH&amp-OSAMA which would have paid out if both the others came true. Wolfers and Zitzewitz estimated the market&#8217-s conditional probability by comparing the price of OSAMA with the price of BUSH&amp-OSAMA. If the price levels were rational, the difference between the two prices had to equal the chance that Osama would be captured and Bush would not be reelected. Since the market price of BUSH&amp-OSAMA was 91% as high as the price of Osama, they concluded that that represented the conditional probability. A weakness of this conclusion is that while investors and arbitrageurs have an incentive to ensure that the price of BUSH is correct relative to ~BUSH, (and OSAMA with respect to ~OSAMA), there&#8217-s no bet that lets an arbitrageur exploit superior knowledge of the conditional probabilities.

Sometimes investors believe they know how one outcome will effect another, and want to bet directly on that linkage. If you were confident before the election that Osama&#8217-s capture would raise the probability of Bush&#8217-s reelection to 95% (above the level the the market prices implied), having the conjunctive bets didn&#8217-t provide a bet that would have looked beneficial to you. You might think you could buy Bush&amp-Osama (because you believe Bush&#8217-s chances are improved if Osama is captured) and sell ~Bush&amp-Osama (because this is the outcome your view says is least likely), but you&#8217-d lose both bets if Osama wasn&#8217-t captured (which is an outcome your prediction doesn&#8217-t specify.)

Conjunctive claims allow observers to deduce connections between claims, but since the investors aren&#8217-t directly rewarded based on the conditional probabilities, they have little incentive to ensure that the implicit conditional probabilities reflect their understanding of the connections between the outcomes. In order to evaluate different proposals we have to look at what investors would spend up-front, and then compare the possible outcomes and how the investor&#8217-s earnings change in each situation.

If Bush is a 60% favorite to be re-elected, and the market thinks there&#8217-s only a 10% chance Osama will be captured before the election, the odds on the conjunctions might be:

&nbsp-Bush reelectedBush defeated
Osama captured.09.009
Osama free.5.4

If you think Osama&#8217-s capture would improve Bush&#8217-s prospects to 95%, what should you buy or sell? Your prediction says that the ratio of Bush&amp-Osama to ~Bush&amp-Osama should be 19:1, but doesn&#8217-t have anything to say about Bush&amp-~Osama or ~Bush&amp-~Osama. If you buy Bush&amp-Osama and sell ~Bush&amp-Osama, you can make the prices match your beliefs better, but you&#8217-ll lose money if Osama isn&#8217-t captured. In order to support conditional bets directly, market operators have to find ways to allow traders to buy positions without exposing themselves to risks due to the independent cases.

A contract that acts like a conditional bet directly (written as BUSH|OSAMA, pronounced as &#8220-Bush given Osama&#8221- or &#8220-Bush conditional on Osama&#8221-) would pay off if Bush is elected, and return your investment if Osama bin Laden isn&#8217-t captured. That gives investors the right incentive.

&nbsp-Bush reelectedBush defeated
Osama capturedGain $1Lose investment
Osama freeReturn investmentReturn investment

In order to support betting on conditional probabilities, the bets have to be able to return the investors&#8217- money in particular cases. I know of three detailed proposals that have this property. They are: betting on arbitrary boolean expressions, representing the complete cross-product of possible outcomes (providing a complete set of Arrow-Debreu securities), and using the independent claim as currency for purchasing the dependent claim. There are two additional suggestions that might work, but haven&#8217-t been written down in sufficient detail to be sure.

Robin described and implemented Combinatorial Information Markets which represent probabilities and traders assets explicitly for all possible combinations of outcomes. Fortnow, Kilian, Pennock, and Wellman described how you might try to support bets on arbitrary boolean combinations of conditions. Their conclusion seemed to be that solving the general problem would be computationally infeasible. They didn&#8217-t describe how to address the problems they found, but I think it&#8217-s possible that a market that supported only binary combinations could be designed. And finally, Peter McCluskey built (and released as open source) USIFEX in 1999. It allows the user to use the coupons of the independent event as the currency. This combination allows traders to express conditionals directly. Unfortunately, that system didn&#8217-t attract a user base quickly enough, and Peter stopped development soon after the initial release.

For an article on Decision Markets written in 1999, Robin Hanson suggested creating markets using assets that pay off in &#8220-units of A if B passes&#8221- (and &#8220-&#8230- if B doesn&#8217-t pass.&#8221-), and allow traders to trade the assets for each other. The price of A|B in terms of B (which can be built from component assets) expresses the conditional bet. Robin didn&#8217-t explain how to set up a market in which people trade assets for assets and didn&#8217-t describe how to let the users see how various combination bets would express the conditional claims they might have been interested in. (This is the first of the two incomplete suggestions.)

Robin&#8217-s Combinatorial Information Market design uses a complex internal representation and can support arbitrary conditional bets. He built a prototype implementation that allows the user to explore these conditionals by choosing assumptions, and then adjusting probabilities in the resulting hypothetical situations. I wrote a prototype of my own in E. Neither prototype is more than a proof-of-concept that the institution works, and neither has been operated for any general market. The st
rength of this approach is that users can express conditional connections between arbitrary claims- this aspect has been shown to be effective in a laboratory experiment. Robin ran tests of this market after he proposed its use for PAM, and there were apparently no problems in running it with 6 traders estimating all outcome combinations for 8 events. The glaring weakness is that it doesn&#8217-t scale well. It&#8217-s not clear how to build a version that would work even with a market with dozens of questions and hundreds of users. I&#8217-ll describe this market in more detail in a future post in this series.

Peter McCluskey built USIFEX in 1999. It works quite differently and doesn&#8217-t seem to have the performance problems of the other proposals. The primary idea for supporting conditional trading is that you buy units of A|B using units of B as currency when betting on a conditional question. The effect is that when buying A|B, you end up with coupons of ~B as part of the purchase, and that&#8217-s what ensures you&#8217-ll be repaid if the independent event doesn&#8217-t occur. USIFEX is open source, but it hasn&#8217-t been maintained since it was released in 2000. The code was resurrected for use in the Swiss MarMix exchange, (AFAICT without making any use of the conditional betting features). The biggest weakness of Peter&#8217-s approach, as I recall, was that it would have taken a lot of users to ensure that the conditional markets weren&#8217-t extremely thin. A longer description of USIFEX is also in the works.

Todd Proebsting built an implementation of the Hanson design that works without conditionals. Dave Pennock wrote up a description of Todd&#8217-s approach, focused on the Market maker. I intend to describe the implications of Todd&#8217-s approach for betting on conditionals in a future post. (This is the second incomplete suggestion.) I think it might be straightforward to extend Todd&#8217-s approach to support conditional betting without running into the exponential growth of Robin&#8217-s solution. The drawback is that the market operator has to separately capitalize and enable every conditional question that you want the system to support, while Robin&#8217-s approach enables all of them by default. It&#8217-s also possible that Zocalo Open Source Prediction Market software would be compatible with this approach, where it&#8217-s clear that Zocalo would require substantial modification to support the Hanson proposal.

Other Articles in this series

  • PM intro: basic formats (2005-12-30)
  • PMs with Open-ended Prices (2006-01-05)
  • Looking at Both Sides (2006-04-17)
  • Book and Market Maker (2006-04-28)
  • Liquidity in N-Way claims (2006-07-19)
  • Continuous Outcomes using Bands and Ladders (2006-09-20)
  • Integrating Book Orders and Market Makers (2007-01-10)

Cross-posted from pancrit.org.

The structure of simExchange game stocks

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Brian Shiau (draft):

Contracts on most prediction markets are often binary contracts that pay depending on whether the event described by the contract occurs or does not occur. This structure is often referred as a binary option [1]. However, a prediction market is not restricted in solving yes or no questions. Contracts can be created to pay a scaling amount so that a prediction market can attempt to ascertain a quantity, such as how much a movie will gross in box office receipts.

Prediction markets have used contracts similar to futures to answer such questions. These contracts have some value that corresponds to a prediction and expire at a certain point, such as four weekends after a movie is released. At expiration, the contract holder cashes out the contract at the spot price (or the sum of box office receipts after four weekends) [2]. However, the problem with video games is that a game can continue to sell for years to come so any arbitrary expiration is not indicative of how well a game will sell. In creating a prediction market for video games, the simExchange required a structure that would accommodate the nature of the video game industry.

There are other quirks to the video game business. One particular problem that has been the ire of many analysts is the lack of comprehensive sales data [3]. Unlike Hollywood movies, video games do not have official sales figures every weekend. Instead, the industry relies on point-of-sale studies, surveys, and intelligent extrapolations from companies like NPD to get an estimate of how many copies a game has sold. The number of copies a game has sold will vary from source to source, although NPD is considered the standard by many in North America as it is the most comprehensive for North American sales.

Given these two problems, video games can continue to sell for years and the lack of data with absolute truth, the simExchange could not easily adopt the structure of most prediction markets already in existence. Instead, it sought a time-tested structure that has been used to answer a similarly mirky question: how much is a company that may last for decades really worth?

No one knows with absolute certainty how much a company is actually worth. That is one reason why the stock market exists for people to trade shares of a company. The stock market aggregates the information of all the traders to hopefully ascertain an accurate valuation for the company (this concept is known as the Efficient Market Hypothesis [4]). Due to the similarity of the issues, stocks on the simExchange function very similarly.

A stock&#8217-s price on the simExchange corresponds to the lifetime worldwide sales of a game, in which 1 DKP corresponds to 10,000 copies sold. These stock prices will climb or fall with monthly sales reports, just like a company&#8217-s stock price will climb or fall with quarterly earnings reports. A stock on the simExchange will also increase or decrease as a result of news on the product, just as a company&#8217-s stock will increase or decrease as a result of news on their products. If people believe a stock is underpriced given the data, people will bid it up and vice versa [5]. There is no automated function by the New York Stock Exchange to cash out a stock and pay shareholders a lump sum of cash depending on how the quarterly earnings for the company fared.

Eventually, a game will stop selling, just like eventually a company will stop growing. In this case the stock price will merely stagnate. Investors of game stocks can cash out just like they would with company stocks by selling their shares (or covering if they are short the stocks). The simExchange market makers will supply the liquidity to close those positions.

Due to this structure, in an efficient state where a diverse pool of traders are participating in the simExchange, game stock prices should become a strong predictor of the lifetime worldwide sales of video game titles [5].

References:
[1] Wolfers, Justin &amp- Zitzewitz, Eric. &#8220-Prediction Markets in Theory and Practice.&#8221- March 2006. (PDF)
[2] Hollywood Stock Exchange Frequently Asked Questions.
[3] Electronic Gaming Business, October 6, 2004.
[4] Shleifer, Andrei. Inefficient Markets: An Introduction to Behavioral Finance. New York: Oxford University Press, Inc. 2000.
[5] Chen, Kay-Yut &amp- Plott, Charles R. &#8220-Information Aggregation Mechanisms: Concept, Design, and Implementation for a Sales Forecasting Problem.&#8221- Hewlett Packard Laboratories and California Institute of Technology. March 2002.

Originally published on the Sim Exchange website. Republished on Midas Oracle .ORG with Brian Shiau&#8217-s permission. ((( Appreciated. :) )))

Related: Keith Jacks Gamble: simExchange is somewhat OK, but will remained confined in play-money land. + Brian Shiau: The Sim Exchange Works Fine, Thanks. + Robin Hanson on the Sim Exchage + simExchange a Keynesian Beauty Contest + The structure of simExchange game stocks + An invitation to join the simExchange beta + Since November 9, 2006, the Sim Exchange has attracted over 2,400 registered players. + Sim Exchange – How to earn additional money? + The Sim Exchange: Basic Trading vs. Advanced Trading + BetFair, Sim Exchange = Vertical Prediction Exchanges, First

Do Gambling Laws Threaten Prediction Markets?

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Because prediction market traders generally rely more on skill than on chance to win, I&#8217-ve argued that they do not qualify in &#8220-gambling&#8221- as defined by U.S. law. I&#8217-ve also admitted, however, that over-ambitious prosecutors might see the matter differently. A recent email exchange I had with Prof. George R. Neumann, who serves on the Board of Directors of the Iowa Electronic Markets, confirmed my worries. I here quote him, with his permission.

&#8220-We have been threatened several times with suits by various states,&#8221- he wrote, &#8220-but so far the CFTC coverage [i.e., the two ‘no action’ letters that the CFTC gave the IEM] has been our trump card.&#8221- Prof. Neumann offered this example: When the IEM ran a market on Hilary Clinton&#8217-s run for the New York Senate seat, an N.Y.C.-based district attorney &#8220-contacted us (via a very nasty letter) to tell us that NY had a law that forbade gambling on elections in that state. He demanded a list of each and every NY State resident who was a participant in our market.&#8221- Wielding the CFTC&#8217-s &#8220-no action&#8221- letter in defense of the IEM, Prof. Neumann directed the DA to file suit in, um, a venue at once very local and yet very inconvenient.

Alas for those who would like to match Neumann&#8217-s feat of legal acumen, the CFTC&#8217-s treatment of the IEM so far looks like a one-shot deal. Or, rather, it looks like a big-shot deal- you would probably need some political help to squeeze another such letter out of the CFTC. While you&#8217-re at it, please ask the CFTC to issue an advisory opinion saying, &#8220-The CFTC has no rationale to regulate transactions or markets in which price discovery functions predominate over hedging functions.&#8221- It could state a market cap limit to make clear the limits on its discretion.

Such a &#8220-public no action letter&#8221- would give a great many useful prediction markets freedom to help us discern the future, just as the IEM has done. It would also, to judge from the IEM&#8217-s experiences, give new prediction markets a shield from state anti-gaming prosecutions.

[Crossposted to Agoraphilia.]

InTrade-TradeSports – Next Major Sportsbook to Withdraw from US

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Another contract expiry debate.

InTrade-TradeSports – Next Major Sportsbook to Withdraw from US:

These contracts will be expired based on who of the listed Sportsbooks will be next to stop accepting US customers (before 11:59:59pm ET on December 31st 2007. )
A contract will expire at 100 if the named Sportsbook is the first to publicly announce it will stop accepting US customers. If the named Sportsbook is not the first to announce this the contract will expire at 0. If none of the listed Sportsbooks make this announcement the SB.DEC07.NONE will expire at 100 and all others at 0.
Expiry is based only on the Sportsbooks listed . Any other Sportsbooks announcing their withdrawal from the US market will not affect expiry of the listed contracts.
Any change to the result after the contract has expired will not be taken into account – Exchange Rule1.4.
Due to the nature of this contract please also see Contract Rule 1.9 Unforeseen Circumstances.
The Exchange reserves the right to invoke Contract Rule 1.8 (Time Protection) if deemed appropriate.
Please contact the exchange by emailing [email protected] if you have any questions regarding this contract before you place a trade.
Clarification (added March 3rd, 2007): The announcement by BetCRIS that all US customers must now access their accounts through BookMaker.com is not considered as a refusal to accept US-based customers. BookMaker.com is powered by BetCRIS and so this is considered more a rebranding/renaming issue rather than the introduction of a policy of refusing US-based customers.
Important:
Please contact the Exchange if you have any query or uncertainty (including how it may be settled) about this Contract, the Rule above or the Contract Rules before you trade.

&#8212-
Price for Next Major Sportsbook to Withdraw from US (**from those listed only**) at intrade.com

BetCris:

Effective immediately, all U.S. customers must now access betting accounts through www.BookMaker.com where you can continue to wager using your same account number and password. All player account details, open wagers, account balances and pending withdrawals have been transferred and will be honored. Powered by BetCRIS, BookMaker.com offers the same quality of service and experience you&#8217-ve come to expect at BetCRIS. Should you have any questions, please contact our Customer Service Department at 1-866-BetCRIS. All non-US customer accounts are unaffected by this change and can continue to access their accounts at BetCRIS.com.

BookMaker:

Following a Legacy of quality in service and renowned bookmaking experience of more than two decades, BookMaker.com is born to aim and serve both professional and recreational players. Always first sportsbook to post lines, the phrase “Where the Line Originates” will continue attracting the world’s sharpest and biggest players.

Powered by BetCRIS International, a recognized sports betting industry Leader since 1985, BookMaker.com provides Safe and Secure sports betting on sporting events, as well as horse racing, online casino games, poker, bingo and mobile betting from any location in the world, 24 hours a day 7 days a week. Thus, whether you are betting from your office computer or calling from the comfort of your home you can rest assured our service will be first class and completely confidential.

NetSol&#8217-s Who Is Database:

BetCris.com – Registrant = Investments Manager, S.A. (Location not specified)

BookMaker.com – Registrant = Investments Manager, S.A. (Costa Rica)

MY OPINION ON THIS CONTRACT:

The InTrade-TradeSports contract makes reference to &#8220-sportsbooks&#8221-, which are identified by their brand name (e.g., &#8220-BetCris&#8221-) and domain name (e.g., &#8220-BetCris.com&#8221-), not to the investing group (a.k.a. holding group), refered here by the trade name &#8220-Investments Manager&#8221-. The BetCris sportsbook has indeed notified US customers that it won&#8217-t take their business anymore. The BetCris contract should then expire at 100.

PostScriptum: The term &#8220-powered by&#8221- means that BetCris&#8217- technology is rented to BookMaker. It does not mean, by itself, that BetCris owns BookMaker (although we see, by other means, that yes, it is the case). In any case, that&#8217-s not the issue. The issue is whether the InTrade-TradeSports contract is about sportsbooks brand names (here, &#8220-BetCris&#8221-) or sportsbooks trade names (here, &#8220-Investments Manager&#8221-). The contract mentioned &#8220-BetCris&#8221-, which is a brand name for the sportsbooks service- the contract did not mention &#8220-Investments Manager&#8221-, which is a trade name for the holding group.

Do you guys/gals agree with me or disagree with me??

Universal Currency for Prediction Markets

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The Sim Exchange:

What is DKP?

DKP is the common currency among players in Massively Multiplayer Online (MMO) games like World of Warcraft and Everquest, earned for performance and used for bidding on items. It is also the name of the currency on the simExchange. DKP is a completely virtual currency and is not backed by real money. On the simExchange, 1 DKP of stock price corresponds to 10,000 copies sold worldwide over lifetime for a game.

#1. What does it mean, &#8220-It is also the name of the currency on the simExchange&#8221-?? Is it a distinct currency with the same name, or the same currency with the same name???

#2. Why the hell would Jason Ruspini and the Yahoo! folks (David Pennock and Daniel Reeves) want to create new universal currencies if we have already DKP??? Can&#8217-t the play-money prediction exchanges (betting exchanges) join this group and share this currency?

&#8212-

Boing Boing: MudFlation

Jason Ruspini: Yootle interest rates and inflation

Sim Exchange – How to earn additional money?

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Play money, that is.

Earning additional DKP

Time Trust: Your time trust is a small reserve that can be used to buy stock. Every 15 minutes, your account&#8217-s time trust will gain 50 DKP. However, your time trust is capped at 5,000 DKP so you either use it or lose it. If you have DKP in your time trust, your stock purchases will draw down from the time trust before your cash reserve.

Submitting Content: Submitting content is a great way to get more DKP. You get a flat fee for submitting content, and then more DKP if people bid up your content. Learn how to submit content by checking out the Submit Articles, Submit Images, Submit Videos Tutorials. Learn more by reading the Rules.

Bidding on Content: Bidding on content and comments is another way you can earn DKP. Each person who bids the same way you do on an article, image, video, comment, or unlisted game will earn you DKP. Learn more about bidding on content by reading the Bids on Content tutorial. Find out the current rates by reading the Rules.

The &#8220-Time Trust&#8221- idea is a great idea. My web-hosting service provider does the same. For each additional week I stay with us, they give me one Giga of additional storage capacity and 16 Giga of additional bandwith capacity &#8212-which my little group blog will never be able to consume anyway ( :) ).

And once I spend the time trust money (before I reach the cap), will they give me more, again, later on, as time passes?

Previous: Universal Currency for Prediction Markets

Since November 9, 2006, the Sim Exchange has attracted over 2,400 registered players.

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Brian Shiau, the founder of the Sim Exchange, has put out a Press release today.

The frontpage is clearer, now. (Brian, the grey and orange tabs are a bit less readable than the two others.) Great, they rank the top-500 traders. Great. (Take that, Inkling ABC7 Futures Markets!!)

Fantastic. I will register there, later on, but I will need to research about the video games &#8212-that&#8217-s not really my turf. I&#8217-m bullish on the Sim Exchange &#8212-it&#8217-s a winner. I wish that Brian Shiau will also rent the software on demand for corporate applications.

Previous: An invitation to join the simExchange beta

Practicing golf in ones backyard

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The video.

Previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • Psstt… Spot that comment, on Google News, about… “bellwethers”… from a political scientist.
  • INSIDER’s STORY: The insightful strategic business report about The Evil Empire that Henry Berg does not want you to see
  • Prediction markets are about lowering transaction costs. That’s how sports come in.
  • The birth certificate of the next president of the United States of America –maybe
  • The marketing association between BetFair and TOTE Tasmania works better than expected.
  • The term “event markets” sucks —and the uncritical thinkers using this crappy term suck too.
  • CLIMBING HIS WAY TO THE TOP: Erik Snowberg is now Assistant Professor of Economics and Political Science at California Institute of Technology.

Technology Prizes & Prediction Markets

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ABC7 Futures Market: Will the $25 million dollar reward for developing something that will extract greenhouse gases be handed out in the next 5 years?

&#8212-

Virgin Earth Challenge:

The Virgin Earth Challenge is a prize of $25m for whoever can demonstrate to the judges&#8217- satisfaction a commercially viable design which results in the removal of anthropogenic, atmospheric greenhouse gases so as to contribute materially to the stability of Earth’s climate. […]

The purpose of the Virgin Earth Challenge is to encourage the development of commercially viable new technology, processes and methods to remove anthropogenic greenhouse gases from the atmosphere to improve the stability of the Earth’s climate.

Entrants must submit a commercially viable design (the “Design”) to achieve the net removal of significant volumes of anthropogenic, atmospheric greenhouse gases each year for at least 10 years without countervailing harmful effects (the “Removal Target”). The removal achieved by the Design must have long term benefits (measured over say 1,000 years) and must contribute materially to the stability of the Earth’s climate.

The prize fund will be awarded to (or shared amongst) any entrants whose Design (in the opinion of the judges) achieves or appears capable of achieving the Removal Target and other criteria set out in paragraph 7 and which in the opinion of the judges makes an outstanding contribution by way of innovation in the fields of engineering or the other physical technologies or in the application of the physical sciences, which is or will be for the benefit of the Earth’s climate. […]

Richard Branson:

History has shown that Technology Prizes have been invaluable in encouraging technological advancements and innovation in many, many areas of science and industry. From the very first recorded prize offered by the British government in 1714, offering three financial incentives to the inventor who developed a device capable of measuring longitude within a given degree of accuracy. The Prize, which has been immortalised in the book Longitude, was won by John Harrison, a self-educated clock maker. Harrison was awarded ?20,000 in 1773 for devising an accurate and durable chronometer.

But prizes were not just the domain of the British- in the 18th Century the French also used Prizes as an incentive to fuel innovation. In 1775 a 100,000 franc prize was offered to the individual who could produce an artificial form of alkali – the wining of this prize was to form the basis of the French chemical industry. Today, vacuum packed food in our fridges and cupboards is nothing remarkable, but it may surprise some to know that it was actually a Prize offered by Napoleon in 1810 which led to Nicolas Appert coming up with a method of vacuum packing cooked food in glass bottles – it took him 15 years of experiments but in the end won him 12,000 francs!

It wasn’t long before newspapers and private sector companies became involved in setting up Prizes to encourage development in many areas. The American automobile industry was encouraged to grow through inducements to win prizes by competing in races set up by newspapers such as the Chicago Tribune in the late 19 th Century. Aviation and the development of long distance flying were greatly encouraged by similar prizes to those offered in America for the fledgling automobile industry. The Daily Mail prize for example, for the first flight across the Channel, was won by Louis Bleriot in 1909- and ten years later, Alcock and Brown won the Mail prize for crossing the Atlantic. Lindebergh was competing for a prize when he flew in the Spirit of St Louis, non-stop from New York to Paris in 1927. The Spitfire was the result of the Schneider trophy, which was a series of prizes for technological development.

The most recent technological Prize was awarded in the area of space travel, and is one that I have come to know very well – the Ansari X Prize – a $10 million dollar Prize set up by Peter Diamandis and funded by the Ansari family. The Ansari X Prize was won in 2004 by Paul Allen, Burt Rutan and Scaled Composites when they successfully flew SpaceShipOne to space and back twice within two weeks. The technological feat of SpaceShipOne resulted in the Virgin Group licensing that technology to build five space ships and two White Knight carrier crafts and has given birth to a commercially viable space tourism industry for the future. Using the latest technology in hybrid rocket motors and next generation turbo fan engines SS2 and WK2 will be environmentally benign.

Previous: You Want Innovation? Offer a Prize –not a Grant. + Stiglitz on using Prizes to Stimulate Innovation

Oscars 2007 – Hollywood Stock Exchange – Bingo!

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HSX Amy Lamare:

Hollywood Stock Exchange (HSX.com) Traders correctly picked 7 out of 8 Top Category Oscar Winners to continue its stellar record.
Los Angeles, California, February 26, 2007 –

Hollywood Stock Exchange (HSX), announced a spectacular 88% success rate for picking this year&#8217-s Oscar winners. The world&#8217-s longest continuously operating commercial prediction market and popular online game once again proved the accuracy of virtual stock markets.

This year Traders hit 7 of 8 in predicting the winners in the top categories. Traders scored a perfect 100% in the Lead Acting, Directing, Writing and Best Picture fields continuing their outstanding trend in picking nominees and Award winners. Last year HSX Traders also hit the 7 out of 8 mark, and the year prior a perfect 8 out of 8 victory. This brings HSX&#8217-s three year cumulative average to 92%.

This year HSX added a fun feature to our Awards Options. Best Feature Animation was not a part of our NominOption® series, but debuted during the Awards Options. Traders were given the chance to predict which of the three nominated animated films would win Oscar gold. They went with the popular Cars, which was edged out last night by Happy Feet.

&#8220-When it comes to movies, the collective wisdom of Hollywood Stock Exchange traders is unmatched&#8221-, said Alex Costakis, Managing Director. &#8220-HSX Traders are savvy, entertainment consumers, with a keen eye for not only predicting Oscar winners, but also for estimating how well a movie will do in box office throughout the year. Think of it as a virtual focus group. The Hollywood Stock Exchange is a proven prediction market technology that empowers individuals to influence Hollywood by making their opinions known by actively participating in this dynamic trading environment&#8221-.

Since its establishment in 1996, HSX has registered over 1.6 million users. HSX offers consumers the opportunity to buy and sell virtual shares of films and actors. HSX also offers unique Trading opportunities surrounding special Award events and consistently beats most polls and industry pundits.

HSX – Oscars Nominations Prediction Markets – Accuracy

Oscars 2007 – TradeSports-InTrade – Bingo!

– Oscars 2007 – Hollywood Stock Exchange – Bingo!

– Debunking HSX Alex Costakis’ conspiracy theory

– Hollywood Stock Exchange’s Alex Costakis makes historical mistake, TOO.

&#8212-

Congrats to the two HSX co-founders (Max Keiser and Michael Burns) and congrats to the current managers (Alex Costakis and Amy Lamare), and all the other people at HSX. :)

One suggestion to Amy Lamare and the other people managing the HSX site: Why don&#8217-t you publish the entirety of your interesting spin output in your site feed (a.k.a. RSS feed)? Alex Costakis complained about ABC7 and their supposed flawed reporting. Well, since you have a large number of registered users, maybe you could inform them directly about the HSX performance for the 2007 Oscars. I&#8217-m a subscriber of the HSX site feed, and I haven&#8217-t seen your P.R. output there, yet. And why not a link to this P.R. output from the HSX frontpage?

If you google the sentence, &#8220-The Press release is dead&#8221- (with the quotes), you&#8217-ll find interesting ideas and suggestions pertaining to internet marketing.

Previous blog posts by Chris F. Masse:

  • A second look at HedgeStreet’s comment to the CFTC about “event markets”
  • Since YooPick opened their door, Midas Oracle has been getting, daily, 2 or 3 dozens referrals from FaceBook.
  • US presidential hopeful John McCain hates the Midas Oracle bloggers.
  • If you have tried to contact Chris Masse thru the Midas Oracle Contact Form, I’m terribly sorry to inform you that your message was not delivered to the recipient.
  • THE CFTC’s SECRET AGENDA —UNVEILED.
  • “Over a ten-year period commencing on January 1, 2008, and ending on December 31, 2017, the S & P 500 will outperform a portfolio of funds of hedge funds, when performance is measured on a basis net of fees, costs and expenses.”
  • Meet professor Thomas W. Malone (on the right), from the MIT’s Center for Collective Intelligence.