# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Accuracy

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Accuracy", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Polymarket Is Not an All-Powerful "Truth Machine"

Polymarket, a crypto-based betting platform, is often hailed as a "truth machine" for its ability to aggregate crowd wisdom through financial stakes. While it has demonstrated remarkable accuracy in predicting major events like the 2024 U.S. presidential election—outperforming traditional polls—its overall reliability is highly inconsistent. Analysis using the Brier score reveals that its predictive power excels in high-liquidity domains like politics and economics but falls to near-random or worse in categories like sports, culture, and tech. The platform’s growing influence is concerning as its odds are increasingly cited by major media outlets like The Wall Street Journal and CNN, lending them an air of authority. This visibility creates a feedback loop where the odds themselves can influence the outcomes they are meant to predict—a phenomenon known as endogeneity. Moreover, the market is vulnerable to manipulation by well-resourced "whales" with access to exclusive information, such as private polls or even military intelligence, as seen in cases involving bets on geopolitical events. While useful for short-term, high-stakes events, Polymarket’s predictions are often unreliable for the vast majority of its contracts due to low liquidity and wide bid-ask spreads. The danger lies not in its occasional failures, but in the unchecked trust it receives—risking a future where a handful of traders can shape perceived reality through a platform masquerading as an oracle of truth.

marsbit2 дня назад 11:40

Polymarket Is Not an All-Powerful "Truth Machine"

marsbit2 дня назад 11:40

Wikipedia Implements New Editing Rules: Vote Passes, Strictly Prohibits Using AI to Generate or Rewrite Article Content

On March 26, Wikipedia officially passed a new policy through a community vote that explicitly prohibits users from directly using AI to generate or rewrite article content. This decision reinforces the platform's commitment to content accuracy and human editorial control. The updated policy strengthens previous guidelines by moving from a recommendation against generating articles from scratch to a strict ban on using large language models (LLMs) for content creation or rewriting. The policy was approved overwhelmingly by volunteer editors, with a vote of 40 to 2, reflecting deep concerns within the community about AI-generated misinformation and inaccuracies. While AI tools are still permitted for suggesting basic edits, they must not introduce any unverified content. All AI-assisted contributions must undergo human review to prevent factual errors or hallucinations. This move highlights Wikipedia’s effort to balance technological efficiency with content integrity amid the growing use of generative AI across digital platforms. By clearly distinguishing between AI-assisted editing and AI-generated content, Wikipedia aims to preserve human-driven knowledge curation and prevent trust issues caused by automated content production. The decision sets a significant precedent for ethical knowledge management in the age of artificial intelligence.

marsbit03/27 01:08

Wikipedia Implements New Editing Rules: Vote Passes, Strictly Prohibits Using AI to Generate or Rewrite Article Content

marsbit03/27 01:08

Only 60% Real Win Rate: Data Reveals the Truth Behind ICO Predictions on Polymarket

Polymarket's TokenSale markets have processed nearly $250 million in volume, boasting impressive accuracy rates—100% for fundraising amounts and over 90% for fully diluted valuations (FDV). However, an analysis of 231 prediction markets across 29 token sales reveals these figures are misleading. The platform functions more as a sentiment indicator, often acting as a contrarian signal. Key findings show that the true prediction accuracy one week before market close is only 66.7%, meaning the crowd is wrong one-third of the time, with errors consistently skewing toward over-optimism. FDV predictions averaged a 35% overestimation. Analysis of 24-hour post-launch volatility showed an average price swing of ±23%, with 75% of tokens facing sell-offs. Only 62.5% of 24-hour FDV predictions were accurate. The 100% accuracy claim is meaningless because markets close after results are known. High trading volume on Polymarket often serves as a reverse indicator—more optimism typically leads to greater inaccuracy. Tokens with conservative predictions (e.g., Monad, Football.fun) saw smaller declines. Actionable signals: High volume (>$50M) and high optimism (>50% FDV overestimation) are bearish. Low volume (<$5M) and accurate predictions (within 20% of actual FDV) are relatively bullish. In a market where most tokens fall below ICO price, "less bad" is the best outcome. Polymarket’s token sales market is essentially a hype meter—extreme confidence often signals maximum investor pain.

marsbit01/31 03:19

Only 60% Real Win Rate: Data Reveals the Truth Behind ICO Predictions on Polymarket

marsbit01/31 03:19

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