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Mark Zuckerberg wants Meta to launch its own prediction market

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Why This Matters

Meta's development of an independent prediction market app, dubbed 'Arena,' signifies a strategic move into the growing industry of prediction markets, which have seen significant trading volumes and legal scrutiny. This initiative could reshape how social media platforms engage users with predictive content and potentially open new monetization avenues, even if initially gamified without real money. The move highlights the tech industry's interest in leveraging prediction markets for user engagement and data insights, despite ongoing legal and regulatory challenges.

Key Takeaways

In Brief

Mark Zuckerberg is betting that prediction markets are the future.

The New York Times reports that Zuck wants Meta to have its own Polymarket-like smartphone app and has given the go-ahead to develop one, internally calling it “Arena.” The app would be independent of Meta’s other social media offerings, although sources told the paper that those social sites could direct users to engagement with the app.

Sources said the current concept for Arena can be described as “experimental but a top priority,” and it weirdly wouldn’t involve money. Instead, it would essentially be a video game where users would earn points for betting correctly on particular topics. The sources added that money could be added later.

Over the past year, prediction markets have fueled big profits and controversy. As of April, trading volume on platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi had reached tens of billions of dollars. Other social media sites — like X (which forged a partnership with Polymarket last summer) — have sought to capitalize on the industry.

Legal cases have also spiked. A notable case involves a former high-ranking special forces soldier who was accused of using insider knowledge to profit from the operation to capture Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro. George Santos is also currently under investigation over alleged Kalshi trades.

States have also begun to sue prediction markets over what they allege are violations of gambling laws. To complicate things further, the current administration, which is decidedly pro-prediction market, has sued states for having sued prediction markets.