Platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket are navigating around gambling prohibitions by asserting that their users are simply wagering against each other on event outcomes, distancing themselves from the label of gambling.
Although the operational aspects of prediction markets resemble sports betting, a significant distinction exists. These markets provide an avenue for insider trading and potential corruption.
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The ease with which individuals possessing insider information can exploit these markets for profit is particularly concerning. It is hardly surprising that a notably corrupt presidential administration in recent history has relaxed regulation and oversight of these prediction markets.
Individuals within the Trump administration, or those with access to government data, have reportedly benefited from these markets. The extent of the corruption is such that even Trump’s teleprompter operator has been implicated in insider trading.
Trump’s longtime teleprompter operator is believed to have generated tens of thousands of dollars by betting on that speech and over a dozen others on the Kalshi prediction market, as federal investigators from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission discovered, according to sources familiar with the situation who spoke to ABC News.
This scheme highlights the pervasive low ethical standards throughout the administration.

