A world where information becomes currency and the future carries a price tag
Cold, blue light painted shadows on a young man’s face in the darkened room in an upscale neighborhood of north Tel Aviv. It was 3 a.m. on a cool June night, the kind of quiet hour where only insomniacs and the intensely driven are awake. The IDF reservist peering at his cell phone was neither. He held a golden opportunity — a chance to turn obligation, duty, and danger into profit.
He wasn’t exactly scrolling through the news, though; he was about to make the news. The app open on his phone was Polymarket, a decentralized prediction platform where the world’s most cynical and most certain gather to trade on the future. And he had just seen military orders indicating that an unlikely attack had been set in motion.
The app screen asked a simple question: “Will Israel launch an attack on Iran before the end of the month?” The “yes” button offered speculators the chance to buy “shares,” or contracts to get paid $1 if the attack happened. Because popular sentiment on the market was that the attack wasn’t likely to occur, the contracts were offered for just 15 cents each.
But this young man had just seen the mobilization orders, and he knew the attack was coming. He hit “buy,” spending about $30,000 on 200,000 shares. He then called a close friend.
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