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Google's Prediction Market

Googling Yourself writes "Employees at Google are encouraged to place bets on Google's prediction market — an exchange that tries to forecast events based on the money wagered on a particular outcome. Employees have made wagers with play money (Goobles, as in rubles) on questions like: will Google open a Russia office? will Apple release an Intel-based Mac? how many users will Gmail have at the end of the quarter? One tangible benefit to the company is that the market allows Google to track how information disseminates in the company. A paper called "Using Prediction Markets to Track Information Flows: Evidence From Google" discusses information flows in the company based on the prediction market data and contains many other interesting observations of Google culture. (pdf)"

4 of 94 comments (clear)

  1. Information, not crystal ball by michaelmalak · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Prediction markets reflect information that is known; they are not perfect crystal balls. They also fall victim to groupthink.

    The best example is that the prediction markets predicted Hillary would win the Democratic nomination by a wide margin. Now the consensus is that it will be Obama by a wide margin.

    1. Re:Information, not crystal ball by DragonWriter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Prediction markets force people to be honest -- there's real money at stake, and a cost to your arrogance.


      They don't "force people to be honest". Prediction markets — if they are positioned to influence the events they are used to "predict", like political futures markets are — are simply a form of advertising (or, viewed another way, campaign donations). Sure, they cost real money, so does buying TV ads. But, (1) they aren't regulated, the way political advertising and donations are, and (2) they are also negative cost if they succeed, unlike regular ads or campaign donations.

      People expend real money on campaign donations and political advertising all the time without any concern for "honesty". To think that political futures markets would somehow, by using "real money", force people to be honest is absurd. Any system where action can influence the perception of political reality will be gamed by those interested in influencing that perception—especially since the perception influences the reality here—and if you make it so that the limiting factor on the degree of influence is the ability to spend money then, like most aspects of the political system, the results will be skewed by the interests of those most able to burn money to acheive their political ends.
    2. Re:Information, not crystal ball by sheldon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Did you notice the stock market dropped after Obama did well in Iowa? He's running on a more populist campaign, it happens most election years.


      Did you notice the day after Obama did well in Iowa, there was a sudden storm front that hit the west coast?

      He's running a Godless campaign, it happens most election years.

      [hint: The market tanks because of a jobs report that came out from the labor dept]
  2. Someone at Google has been reading John Brunner... by RealGene · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ..who had this as a significant plot element in his novel, The Shockwave Rider
    --Gene

    --
    Mission: To provide products that consume time and energy as entertainingly as permitted by the laws of thermodynamics.