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Polymarket enables betting on social media influence metrics, and bots are already a problem

By Editorial Team · Published June 5, 2026 · 2 min read · Source: Crypto Briefing
AI & Crypto
Polymarket enables betting on social media influence metrics, and bots are already a problem

Polymarket enables betting on social media influence metrics, and bots are already a problem

The prediction market platform's partnership with Kaito AI has spawned over 152 active contracts tied to clout metrics, but the manipulation risks are exactly what you'd expect.

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Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 4, 2026

You can now place real money bets on how many people are talking about someone on the internet. In 2026, it’s just another Tuesday on Polymarket.

The prediction market platform has rolled out what it calls “attention markets” in partnership with Kaito AI, letting users trade on social media metrics like mindshare, sentiment, tweet volumes, video views, and platform rankings. As of early June 2026, there are more than 152 active contracts in this social media sector, with cumulative trading volume surpassing $5.4 million.

How attention became a tradeable asset

The collaboration between Polymarket and Kaito AI launched back in February 2026. Kaito AI aggregates social data from major platforms including X, TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, giving Polymarket the raw material to construct markets around cultural relevance and online discussion volumes.

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The initial pilot markets tested the waters with questions like “How high will Polymarket’s mindshare go by March 31, 2026?” That single contract generated over $1.3 million in trading volume. A separate market tracking Crypto Twitter mindshare pulled in over $90,000.

The bot-shaped elephant in the room

Here’s the thing about building financial markets on top of social media metrics: the metrics themselves are notoriously unreliable. Follower counts can be inflated. Engagement can be manufactured. Entire conversations can be fabricated by bot networks for a few hundred dollars. When you attach real money outcomes to those numbers, you’ve essentially created a financial incentive to manipulate the very data the market depends on.

This isn’t a theoretical concern. Consider the case of Zion Thomas, an influencer whose posts about memecoins have been the subject of over $50,000 in trading volume on Polymarket’s attention markets. When someone can profit by betting on a person’s social media reach, and that reach can be synthetically boosted, the conflict of interest writes itself.

What this means for investors

Polymarket’s broader trajectory tells an interesting story. The platform has processed billions in cumulative volume, with over $3 billion cited in a single January period alone. Social media markets remain a niche within that larger ecosystem, but $5.4 million in volume across 152 contracts in just a few months suggests genuine demand for this kind of product.

The absence of major regulatory backlash so far doesn’t mean regulators aren’t watching. Prediction markets already occupy legally contested territory in multiple jurisdictions. Adding social media manipulation dynamics to the mix could accelerate scrutiny, particularly if high-profile manipulation incidents generate headlines.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
This article was originally published on Crypto Briefing and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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