Skip to main content

Zuckerberg Taps Meta Teams to Build Moneyless Prediction Markets: NYT



Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has reportedly pushed for the creation of a new prediction markets mobile app—code-named “Arena”—a move that could intensify competition in a sector that has already drawn close attention from US regulators and lawmakers.


In a New York Times report published Tuesday, citing two employees familiar with the matter, Zuckerberg ordered staff to build the app so users can place wagers using a points-based system rather than direct monetary betting. The app is described as operating independently from Meta’s core social platforms, including Facebook and Instagram.



Key takeaways



  • Meta is reportedly developing “Arena,” a points-based prediction markets app, separate from Facebook and Instagram.

  • Zuckerberg’s direction suggests Meta views prediction markets as strategically important, despite the sector’s regulatory headwinds.

  • The approach could put Meta on a collision course with established prediction platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket.

  • US legal and legislative scrutiny around prediction markets—especially concerns over insider trading—continues to shape the environment.

  • Meta’s broader history with crypto-adjacent products, including its stablecoin efforts, adds context to why regulators may watch closely.



Why Meta’s “Arena” could matter to prediction markets


Prediction markets have become a high-stakes area where finance, information, and incentives overlap—often with outcomes tied to public events. That overlap is precisely what attracts both supporters and critics: the systems can theoretically help discover probabilities, but they can also create incentives around information that may not be widely available.


The New York Times report indicates Meta’s “Arena” would rely on points instead of money. That design choice may be intended to distinguish the product’s mechanics from classic wagering models—and potentially affect how regulators interpret it. Still, the core concept remains similar: users make selections on future outcomes and receive payoffs based on those results.


If Meta launches a functional prediction-market offering at consumer scale, it could challenge the distribution advantage held by platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket—especially if Meta can leverage its audience without requiring users to leave its ecosystem.



Scale and strategy: Meta’s user base as a competitive lever


Meta has highlighted the reach of its apps in its public reporting. As noted in the New York Times story, Meta reported that its apps drew 3.56 billion daily users as of March. Even without a direct claim that “Arena” would match that usage, a social-media giant building a separate consumer app for prediction markets would likely be viewed as an attempt to bring new participants into the category.


Market share in prediction markets is heavily influenced by liquidity and user activity. While Meta’s plan is still unconfirmed in terms of timeline or launch details, a large-scale entrant could change how quickly markets form, how frequently users trade, and how competitors market to mainstream audiences.



Crypto and regulation: a pattern of Meta-led pivots


Meta’s reported interest in prediction markets comes after earlier moves that connected the company to the broader crypto and blockchain ecosystem. In 2019, Meta announced Libra, later rebranded to Diem, before the project was dropped in 2022.


More recently, Meta has made incremental steps in payments and stablecoin-adjacent functionality. In April, Meta rolled out USDC payouts for certain Facebook creators in Colombia and the Philippines, according to prior reporting. At the same time, some US lawmakers raised concerns about Meta’s plans for stablecoins in the United States.


Those prior threads matter because “Arena” is likely to be evaluated not only as a standalone app, but as another example of Meta exploring financial-like products with real-world implications. Even if “Arena” uses a points mechanism, regulators and policymakers may still consider whether it operates like gambling, a financial product, or a market for event-related contracts.



US scrutiny remains: legal battles and insider-trading concerns


The United States has not treated prediction markets as a uniform category. Regulators—including the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)—have been engaged in legal battles with various state authorities over how prediction market activity should be regulated.


Lawmakers, meanwhile, have floated legislation aimed at curbing perceived problems such as insider trading and profiting from nonpublic information while in office. The New York Times report appears against that backdrop, where both enforcement and potential new rules could affect how prediction markets operate.


One widely reported flashpoint involves allegations that an individual associated with a military unit profited heavily from a Polymarket contract tied to a Venezuelan event. According to earlier coverage cited in the source article, Gannon Ken Van Dyke was reported as being scheduled for trial in December, after an event contract reportedly paid out more than $400,000.


That kind of case is often cited by critics as evidence that prediction markets can be vulnerable to information asymmetry. A Meta-backed product would therefore face an unusually intense expectation: not only to deliver a user experience, but to address governance, market integrity, and compliance risks.



What to watch next


For readers and builders, the immediate question is whether “Arena” becomes a formal, regulator-facing product with clear rules around participation, market creation, and incentives—or whether it remains experimental with limited scope. Until Meta confirms the plan and details how the points model works in practice, the most important signals will be any public filings, platform policy changes, and regulatory responses tied to prediction-market activity.



https://www.cryptobreaking.com/zuckerberg-taps-meta-teams-to/?utm_source=blogger%20&utm_medium=social_auto&utm_campaign=Zuckerberg%20Taps%20Meta%20Teams%20to%20Build%20Moneyless%20Prediction%20Markets:%20NYT%20

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Coinbase's x402 launches AI agents app store for payments

Coinbase-backed x402 has unveiled Agentic.market, a dedicated marketplace aimed at increasing the usefulness of AI agents by aggregating thousands of apps and services that agents can access without any API keys. The rollout positions the platform as a central hub for agents to discover, evaluate, and deploy capabilities across a standardized payments layer. Coinbase product lead Nick Prince described Agentic.market in a video posted on X as a storefront for discovering, comparing, and using x402 services. The marketplace is designed to give both humans and their AI agents access to a wide range of tools—from data feeds to consumer apps—without the friction of managing API credentials. A storefront for discovering, comparing, and using x402 services. Thousands of services. Zero API keys. Powered by x402. Prince added that the market offers a web interface for humans to browse and assess services, alongside a programming layer that lets AI agents autonomously search, filter, and integra...

Mastercard Launches AI Agent Pay System With Ripple and Solana Help

Mastercard has launched Agent Pay for Machines, a payments system built for autonomous software agents. The service allows AI agents to send and receive payments without direct human action. It brings Ripple, Coinbase, and Solana Foundation into Mastercard’s push for automated digital commerce. Ripple Brings XRPL and RLUSD to Mastercard’s Agent Pay System Mastercard introduced Agent Pay for Machines on June 10 as a tool for machine-led payments. The system targets high-volume and low-value transactions across business and consumer use cases. It also supports automated settlement between software agents and connected machines. Ripple will support the system through the XRP Ledger and its RLUSD stablecoin. The company said that settlement will become more important as automated commerce grows. It also sees blockchain rails as useful for fast and rule-based payments. RippleX senior vice president Markus Infanger said XRPL and RLUSD support enterprise-grade agent payments. He said the tool...

Top Cryptocurrencies to Watch: BTC, ETH, BNB, XRP, Solana, Dogecoin & More

Market Analysis and Price Predictions for Key Cryptocurrencies Recent market dynamics reveal a cautious sentiment across the cryptocurrency landscape, with Bitcoin struggling to maintain levels above $90,000 and many major altcoins facing downward pressure. Indicators point toward reduced participation from both institutional and retail investors, raising concerns about a potential consolidation phase after notable gains earlier in the year. Bitcoin has fallen below $87,000, reflecting waning demand at higher price points. Institutional fund flows into BTC and ETH ETFs have turned negative, indicating a period of subdued market activity. Active addresses and Binance deposit/withdrawal activities are at annual lows, suggesting market indecision. Most leading altcoins are approaching support levels, with some poised for potential breakdowns. Tickers mentioned: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Binance Coin, XRP, Solana, Dogecoin, Cardano, Bitcoin Cash, Chainlink, Hyperliquid Sentiment: Neutral to Sli...