Polymarket is facing increased scrutiny, including a new lawsuit that claims the platform participated in deceptive marketing practices.

A Wall Street Journal investigation found 70% of Polymarket promotional videos featured fabricated bets totaling $1.9M, raising concerns about deceptive

A Wall Street Journal probe found Polymarket paid creators to post 1,100 videos with fake trades and nearly $1.9M in fabricated winnings on dummy websites.

A bipartisan pair of senators pressed regulators to scrutinize the prediction market’s deceptive marketing. An investigation has already been underway.

Polymarket is facing increased scrutiny, including a new lawsuit that claims the platform participated in deceptive marketing practices.

The probe comes after the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Department of Justice dropped previous inquiries into Polymarket last July.

The request follows a report alleging Polymarket paid social media influencers to film trades on fake websites.

NACA sues Polymarket in D.C. Superior Court, alleging deceptive influencer marketing targeting college students with paid promotions that hid financial

Bipartisan senators urge CFTC to investigate Polymarket over fake winning-bet video allegations, adding to the platform's long regulatory history.

The CFTC launched an extensive investigation into Polymarket as bipartisan scrutiny and a consumer lawsuit intensified regulatory pressure.