


Eternity
260 posts









Here's my honest opinion on the MSTR market resolution. It will close NO. This is because UMA is forced to respect the rules as written by Polymarket. Polymarket changed the rules, and now the outcome is literally in the rules. Even if UMA voters think that this outcome is ridiculous... they are forced to ratify it. They must abide by the rules that Polymarket wrote. So really... in 5 hours, we simply receive confirmation that UMA is forced to follow centralized Polymarket decisionmaking. Polymarket can change the rules, at any time, for any reason, and UMA are forced to respect it. No voting needed. So is UMA really that independent? Does UMA hold any power whatsoever? Not really. It's puppet decentralization so that Polymarket can shift dispute blame onto a separate entity. This market most likely closes NO in 5 hours. But that doesn't change anything. The scam already occurred. Clearly, the way that this gets solved will not be through Polymarket's internal processes. So let's take it to the next level. In my opinion, Polymarket made a massive mistake here by changing the rules so brazenly. They fucked up... BAD. If you're going to rely on a system that offloads dispute blame to another entity, you shouldn't take it upon yourself to cut that entity out of the resolution process. Now, the blame falls entirely on Polymarket's shoulders. This really isn't a difficult argument to make. Any rational individual who looks at this market can conclude that Polymarket themselves now have the responsibility of this market's resolution. Big mistake, and that's what makes this case very different from prior UMA voting disputes. You can't hide behind UMA now. Polymarket markets are resolved according to a set of pre-defined and stated rules. Polymarket themselves modified these market rules. The clarification materially changed the conditions for a Yes outcome after trading had already occurred. Polymarket's own documentation says clarifications "cannot change the fundamental intent of the question." Clearly, this one did. Polymarket, your time is running out.

Just took a potential 250x bet on @Polymarket (as did @0xSweep earlier as well). It is undeniable that Microstrategy sold 32 bitcoin before May 31st, 11:59 pm ET, as their own filing from June 1st shows. Got 5,123 "YES" shares for $20, for may 31st. The market's rule was simple: "This market will resolve to "YES" if MicroStrategy sells any of its Bitcoin by 11:59 PM ET on the date specified in the title. Otherwise, this market will resolve to "NO"." Not when they announce it, when the sell it. Market still resolved to "NO". It was disputed once, instantly resolved to "NO" again. Hours later, disputed again, where we are now (in dispute) 16 hours till the 2nd dispute settles, which means anyone could still make this very decent risk/return bet, nfa. The only reason why this would resolve to "NO" is bad faith, a fundamentally broken resolution system that would expose them as unable to guarantee the correct functioning of their platform, or straight up corruption, which wouldn't be the craziest. Oh, and the cherry on top: x.com/PolymarketMone… they literally admitted to it themselves in one of their accounts 😭 Even with all this evidence, it's a very long shot Holding 5,123 shares as of now 👀 Worst case, I lose $20. Best case, I make 5k. Might buy a litte more tomorrow when I wake. I believe it would be cheaper, for various reasons, for polymarket to resolve properly & fairly to the corresponing "YES". We'll see in a few hours



I was just scammed for $500K by Polymarket. I am "willo2", the top holder of YES on "MicroStrategy sells Bitcoin by May 31st". Here's what happened:











