They had clear rules that didn't say what you thought they said. I
might call them "unclear", but not "bad".
> But from what I was told there has been a statement made by the White
> House that the missiles went a few hundred miles and a posting on a
> DOD public inquiry site that the White House comments stand. The
> problem now is that tradesports doesn't understand what Stephen
> Hadley said in the White House statement. He said that the missiles
> went out "about 275 miles, something like that." But TS is calling
> that too vague.
Did DoD give the starting points? Do you have independent DoD
confirmation of the launch sites? Why not show that to TS and see
whether that clarifies it for them. Have you tried to convince TS that
no matter what direction they went, 275 miles (plus or minus 25) would
put them outside NK waters?
Everyone expected the missiles to pass Japan, in which case any
plausible descriptions would have been sufficient. But the missiles
were far short of that, so they didn't meet the judging criteria. It's
just like an athletic contest; it isn't sufficient to play better than
your opponent, you have to play enough better than your opponent that
the inevitable refereeing errors don't make a difference. Otherwise the
outcome is up to chance.
TS chose judging criteria that were tight enough to make the difference
when the missiles didn't go as far as expected.
Chris
--
Chris Hibbert
(650)289-4054 until July 31, then (650)968-6319
Principal Investigator, Prediction Markets
ch...@commerce.net
http://zocalo.sourceforge.net/
The DOD does not mention the launching point but the White House press
briefing specifically does. The launching points were on the North
Korean coast on the Sea of Japan. Stephen Hadley did not say that the
missiles went 275 miles up, or along the coast, he said they went 275
out. The judging criteria is whether the missiles went beyond 12
miles.
TS has not addressed this point to my knowledge.