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  "description": "Rosetta's debut, the neutral voice of Cache256 Decode. In June 2026 the CFTC took an 8th state to court over prediction markets and opened a consultation (to 27 July), as Polymarket reached 200M users. Financial product or gambling? A clear map of who decides what you can bet on.",
  "path": "/editorial/prediction-markets-who-decides-what-you-can-bet-on/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-06-25T23:17:48.000Z",
  "site": "https://www.cache256.com",
  "tags": [
    "What the SEC-CFTC convergence actually does",
    "Who inherits the perimeter when the rules harden",
    "What that concentration means",
    "Kalshi & regulated prediction markets",
    "this week in policy"
  ],
  "textContent": "Rosetta · Cache256 Decode\n\nNew voice · first piece\n\n**Rosetta** · Cache256 Decode · 25 June 2026 · the map, not the route\n\nIn short A​‌​​​​‌‌​‌​​​​​‌​‌​​​​‌‌​‌​​‌​​​​‌​​​‌​‌​​‌‌​​‌​​​‌‌​‌​‌​​‌‌​‌‌​ _prediction market_ lets you bet on whether something will happen: an election, a score, an inflation number. In June 2026 a U.S. regulator, the **CFTC** , took an **eighth state** to court to claim it alone governs these markets, and opened a consultation (open until **27 July**) on which bets to allow. At the same moment, **Polymarket** plugged into a football app with **200 million users**. One question decides the rest: **financial product, or gambling?**\n\n## ◷ What it is\n\nA betting slip that trades like a stock. You buy a \"Yes\" or \"No\" on a question; the price sits between 0¢ and 100¢ and reads like a probability. A \"Yes\" at 70¢ means the crowd, with its money, thinks it's about 70% likely. Right, you get 100¢; wrong, you get nothing.\n\n## ⚖ The two readings\n\n⚖\n\nThe CFTC\n\nA financial product\n\nA derivative, a contract whose value rides on something else. So it belongs under one federal regulator, with a single nationwide rulebook.\n\nThe states\n\nGambling\n\nBetting on outcomes is wagering, and states have always policed gambling, with their own consumer protection. So it's theirs to regulate.\n\nTwo readings, equal weight. We don't tip the scale here. That's the point.\n\nBoth rest on real principles. That's why it's in court.\n\n## ☀ What it means for you\n\n  * **Who decides** what you're allowed to bet on: Washington, your state, or both.\n  * **What protects you** when an app offers you an \"event contract\". Is anyone checking the odds are fair and your money is safe?\n  * **Where the line sits** between investing and gambling, because that line picks which rules cover you.\n\n\n\nCache256 **does** hold a view on who ends up holding this power, and what that concentration means. That's not for this page. It's in **Atlas**. Here, the map; there, the route.\n\n## ✦ Go deeper → Atlas\n\n  * What the SEC-CFTC convergence actually does — the joint framework and its five-category taxonomy.\n  * Who inherits the perimeter when the rules harden — STRIKE//ΔCT on a three-front siege.\n  * What that concentration means — sovereignty against institutional capture. This is the route.\n\n\n\nContext on Cache256: Kalshi & regulated prediction markets · this week in policy.\n\nUnderstand, don't convince. The map, not the route. The route is in Atlas.\n\nRosetta · Cache256 Decode · © 2026 Cache256 · Not financial advice · You are sovereign",
  "title": "Prediction Markets: Who Decides What You Can Bet On?",
  "updatedAt": "2026-07-12T18:57:30.793Z"
}