OpenAI解雇一名员工,涉嫌预测市场内幕交易。
OpenAI fires an employee for prediction market insider trading

原始链接: https://www.wired.com/story/openai-fires-employee-insider-trading-polymarket-kalshi/

OpenAI最近解雇了一名员工,因为他利用公司机密信息在Polymarket等预测市场平台上进行交易,违反了禁止谋取私利的政策。这一事件是Unusual Whales金融数据平台发现的,与OpenAI相关事件周围更大范围的可疑活动有关。 分析显示,在60个钱包中发现了77笔潜在的非法交易,这些交易的时间与重大公告有关,例如Sora发布、GPT-5开发以及Sam Altman的临时下台——其中一名交易者通过押注他回归赚取了超过16,000美元。这些交易通常涉及在事件发生前不久出现的新钱包,并进行大额、准确的投注。 预测市场的兴起,允许对未来结果进行投注,引发了对内幕交易的担忧。其他平台,如Kalshi,正在积极向监管机构报告可疑活动,包括涉及Mr. Beast员工和一位政治候选人的案件。Polymarket目前保持沉默,但这一事件凸显了监管这些日益普及且可能被利用的市场所面临的挑战。

## OpenAI 员工与加密货币交易 一名 OpenAI 员工因内幕交易被解雇,据报道,该员工利用对 OpenAI 即将发布的 GPT-4 版本的了解来获利,涉及预测市场。 Hacker News 论坛随后的一场讨论强调了该员工为掩盖其活动所采取的手段,创建了许多新的比特币账户。 这引发了关于加密货币容易受到欺诈以及钱包创建日期——即使对于余额很少或为零的账户——对于那些试图混淆交易的人来说的潜在价值的更广泛讨论。 一位评论员建议该员工可以通过在暗网上购买较老的比特币地址来提高其匿名性。 虽然承认对匿名加密货币交易(如 Zcash)的令人兴奋的研究,但讨论最终表达了担忧,即合法用例经常被非法活动所掩盖。
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原文

OpenAI has fired an employee following an investigation into their activity on prediction market platforms including Polymarket, WIRED has learned.

OpenAI CEO of Applications, Fidji Simo, disclosed the termination in an internal message to employees earlier this year. The employee, she said, “used confidential OpenAI information in connection with external prediction markets (e.g. Polymarket).”

“Our policies prohibit employees from using confidential OpenAI information for personal gain, including in prediction markets,” says spokesperson Kayla Wood. OpenAI has not revealed the name of the employee or the specifics of their trades.

Evidence suggests that this was not an isolated event. Polymarket runs on the Polygon blockchain network, so its trading ledger is pseudonymous but traceable. According to an analysis by the financial data platform Unusual Whales, there have been clusters of activities, which the service flagged as suspicious, around OpenAI-themed events since March 2023.

Unusual Whales flagged 77 positions in 60 wallet addresses as suspected insider trades, looking at the age of the account, trading history, and significance of investment, among other factors. Suspicious trades hinged on the release dates of products like Sora, GPT-5, and the ChatGPT Browser, as well as CEO Sam Altman’s employment status. In November 2023, two days after Altman was dramatically ousted from the company, a new wallet placed a significant bet that he would return, netting over $16,000 in profits. The account never placed another bet.

The behavior fits into patterns typical of insider trades. “The tell is the clustering. In the 40 hours before OpenAI launched its browser, 13 brand-new wallets with zero trading history appeared on the site for the first time to collectively bet $309,486 on the right outcome,” says Unusual Whales CEO Matt Saincome. “When you see that many fresh wallets making the same bet at the same time, it raises a real question about whether the secret is getting out.”

Prediction markets have exploded in popularity in recent years. These platforms allow customers to buy “event contracts” on the outcomes of future events ranging from the winner of the Super Bowl to the daily price of Bitcoin to whether the United States will go to war with Iran. There are a wide array of markets tied to events in the technology sector; you can trade on what Nvidia’s quarterly earnings will be, or when Tesla will launch a new car, or which AI companies will IPO in 2026.

As the platforms have grown, so have concerns that they allow traders to profit from insider knowledge. “This prediction market world makes the Wild West look tame in comparison,” says Jeff Edelstein, a senior analyst at the betting news site InGame. “If there's a market that exists where the answer is known, somebody's going to trade on it.”

Earlier this week, Kalshi announced that it had reported several suspicious insider trading cases to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the government agency overseeing these markets. In one instance, an employee of the popular YouTuber Mr. Beast was suspended for two years and fined $20,000 for making trades related to the streamer’s activities; in another, the far-right political candidate Kyle Langford was banned from the platform for making a trade on his own campaign. The company also announced a number of initiatives to prevent insider trading and market manipulation.

While Kalshi has heavily promoted its crackdown on insider trading, Polymarket has stayed silent on the matter. The company did not return requests for comments.

In the past, major trades on technology-themed markets have sparked speculation that there are Big Tech employees profiting by using their insider knowledge to gain an edge. One notorious example is the so-called “Google whale,” a pseudonymous account on Polymarket that made over $1 million trading on Google-related events, including a market on who the most-searched person of the year would be in 2025. (It was the singer D4vd, who is best known for his connection to an ongoing murder investigation after a young fan’s remains were found in a vehicle registered to him.)

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