POTS Blog

Prediction Markets & DeFi, Explained

Guides on prediction markets, non-custodial trading, algorithmic tokens, and the Polymarket ecosystem.

polymarket

Polymarket vs Pots Market: What's the Difference?

Pots Market is a Polymarket Builder — same order book and settlement, plus token rewards. Here's how they relate and what's actually different.

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tokenomics

Pots Core: Where Stable DeFi Meets Prediction Markets

Pots pairs a stable bond protocol with a prediction market. Here's how the PBM flywheel turns market activity into real, verifiable yield.

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polymarket

What Is a Polymarket Builder? Shared Liquidity Explained

A Polymarket Builder routes orders into Polymarket's shared order book instead of bootstrapping its own. Here's what that means for traders.

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tokenomics

What Is Real Yield in DeFi? (And How to Spot Fake APY)

Real yield comes from actual protocol revenue, not token printing. Here's how to tell sustainable yield from inflationary APY that can't last.

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tokenomics

Collateral Floor vs Peg: How Algorithmic Tokens Hold Value

A peg targets a fixed price; a collateral floor sets a verifiable minimum backing. Here's the difference and why it changes a token's risk profile.

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non custodial

EIP-712 Explained: How Signed Orders Protect Your Funds

EIP-712 lets you sign a readable, structured message instead of blind-signing hex. Here's how it keeps non-custodial trading safe and verifiable.

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non custodial

What Does Non-Custodial Mean in Crypto?

Non-custodial means you hold your own keys and funds — no platform can freeze or move them. Here's what it means and why it matters for trading.

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prediction markets

Prediction Markets vs Polls: Why Markets Predict Better

Polls ask opinions; prediction markets price them with money. Here's why markets often forecast elections and events more accurately than polling.

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prediction markets

Are Prediction Markets Accurate? What the Data Shows

Prediction markets often beat polls and pundits. Here's the accuracy data, why money sharpens forecasts, and where markets still get it wrong.

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