Google strips Polymarket from News results
Polymarket market pages briefly appeared in Google News results before being removed after Google said the listings had shown up “by mistake”. The links appeared alongside articles from established publishers and sent users straight to event contracts on Polymarket instead of reported news coverage.
The episode matters because it crossed a line Google usually keeps clear. Prediction markets want more distribution and legitimacy, while news products are meant to surface reporting from eligible publishers, not live betting pages.
Google says the listings were a mistake
A Google spokesperson said the site “briefly appeared in Google News in error” and is no longer showing up in News. Google also said News is meant to feature sources that create content about current issues, events, and important topics, with policies that determine which sites can appear there.
That makes this look more like a classification error than a product change. Google has not said how Polymarket ended up in news results or how long the listings were there, though reports cited by The Verge said similar sightings had been circulating on social media as early as January.
The mix-up blurred betting and reporting
Before the links disappeared, one search tied to ship traffic in the Strait of Hormuz showed a Polymarket contract below articles from Reuters and The Guardian. That placed a wager on a live geopolitical event in the same feed as reported journalism, exactly the kind of overlap critics of prediction markets worry about as the sector moves further into mainstream platforms.
For Polymarket, the brief appearance still said something. Even if accidental, it showed how easily market odds can start to resemble an information product when they appear inside familiar distribution channels. That matters for platforms that want users to read prices as a live signal about the world, not just as bets.
Prediction markets are moving closer to the media
The removal comes as prediction market firms push further into information products. Bloomberg reported in November that Google struck a deal to bring Kalshi and Polymarket data into Google Finance searches, and Fox said last week it would integrate Kalshi probabilities across its news and streaming platforms. That leaves this Google News slip as a useful sign, even if it lasted only briefly. The listings are gone, but the push to place prediction market data next to mainstream reporting is not.