Two Polymarket traders have filed suit against the prediction market platform over how it resolved a market tied to Strategy's May bitcoin sale. The plaintiffs allege Polymarket wrongly resolved the contract as "No" even though Strategy's SEC filing disclosed it sold 32 BTC between May 26 and May 31.
Why it matters
Prediction market resolutions are the entire product. When users disagree with how an oracle-equivalent decision is made, the dispute goes to the heart of whether the platform is a venue or an editor. The filing puts Polymarket's UMA-based resolution mechanism under direct legal pressure rather than the usual governance-token debate.
Market impact
The dollar amounts in the case are small. The exposure is procedural: every contested resolution from here forward becomes a possible template for litigation, and Polymarket's terms of service are now being tested in court rather than in the comments section.
Frequently asked questions
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What is Polymarket being sued over?
Two traders allege Polymarket wrongly resolved a market on Strategy's May bitcoin sale as "No," even though Strategy's SEC filing showed it sold 32 BTC between May 26 and May 31.
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Why does this case matter beyond the dollar amounts?
The lawsuit challenges Polymarket's resolution mechanism, which is the core of how the platform settles prediction contracts. A ruling against the platform could expose every contested resolution to similar legal scrutiny.
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How does Polymarket normally resolve disputed markets?
Polymarket uses UMA's optimistic oracle for most resolutions, with disputes escalated to token-holder voting when challenged. The mechanism has been debated but rarely tested in court.
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What was the market in question about?
It was tied to whether Strategy would make a notable bitcoin divestment during a specific May window. The plaintiffs argue the 32 BTC sale disclosed in the SEC filing should have qualified.
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What is the practical impact on Polymarket users?
In the short term, nothing changes. If the case produces a precedent against Polymarket, future disputed resolutions could face litigation rather than governance-token votes.
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