Quote from: zack on October 15, 2014, 03:53:37 PM
Yes, markets need to resolve.
Could you elaborate? What is the worst case scenario that could occur in a market that does not resolve? The way I see it, the worst case is that the winners may have to settle for just a small token under 100% in order to cash out. In my view, any effort at prolonged manipulation of the price will inherently result in a net loss for the manipulators and is inherently unsustainable.
I'm not necessarily suggesting scrapping the resolution system altogether. Maybe the resolution method can be defined by the market author in the definition of the market. As in, whether the market will close with an official resolution using VoteCoins at all, and if so, what the value of phi is. I'm just not convinced that it needs to close. Even if a malicious entity owned 51% of all CashCoins, if they attempted to fix a market price to the wrong end (strong arm it, buying up the orders on the wrong side), you would only need a small minority of CashCoin owners to buy the correct shares cheaply and burn out the manipulators for a huge profit.