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It is kinda wild. I think I saw it shared here, but there was a video of someone basically saying prediction markets could replace delivery services. Instead of paying uber eats for delivery, you have a market for whether you will receive a certain item on a certain day. This incentivizes people to take yes at favorable odds then complete the task.

Obviously it’s hyperbolic and an extreme example, but it does make sense in theory. Same could apply to assassinations

I found it on Instagram by searching google: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DSDvhsjj_Ob/

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That's some funny reverse psychology shi. Like, "I bet you're not gonna cook me a 7 course steak dinner!" "Oh yeah? Just watch!"

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The possibilities are endless

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3 sats \ 1 reply \ @adlai 2h
Instead of paying uber eats for delivery, you have a market for whether you will receive a certain item on a certain day.

that seems a little ridiculous. prediction markets work better when lots of people and liquidity are concentrated on a few questions that interest everybody, not fragmented to lots of questions that each interest almost nobody.

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Yes. That’s why I said it’s an extreme, hyperbolic example

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