Last updated: April 20, 2026.
PredictWire exists to help traders, journalists, and researchers understand prediction markets. We hold our content to a standard designed for a financial-adjacent audience making real decisions with real money. This page describes how we research, write, review, and correct our work.
Our Research Process
Every article begins with primary source research. For platform reviews, that means placing test trades, contacting support, and reading the platform’s terms of service in full. For news and odds coverage, that means reading official filings, regulator statements, and on-chain or exchange data before we read competitor coverage. We cite primary sources whenever they exist.
Use of AI Tools
PredictWire uses AI tools to assist with research, drafting, and data processing. All content is reviewed by a human editor before publication, and all factual claims — especially probability estimates, regulatory references, and dollar figures — are verified against primary sources. We do not publish AI-generated content that has not been reviewed by a human.
Sourcing and Attribution
Statistical claims are linked to their source. When we cite market probabilities, we name the platform, the contract, and the date and time of the price observation. When we quote a person, we link to the source of the quote. We do not fabricate quotes, statistics, or sources under any circumstances.
Opinions vs. Reporting
Analysis and opinion articles are labeled as such. Straight news and data articles stick to observable facts. We do not issue direct trading recommendations; we publish data, analysis, and frameworks so readers can make their own decisions.
Corrections Policy
When we make a factual error, we fix it and publish a dated correction notice at the top of the article. We do not silently rewrite published pieces. If you spot an error, email corrections@predictwire.io.
Not Financial Advice
Nothing on PredictWire is a solicitation to buy, sell, or hold any contract, security, or digital asset. Prediction market contracts carry risk of total loss. Readers should do their own research and, where appropriate, consult a licensed advisor before trading.