Prediction markets provider Polymarket is developing a new sports integrity platform in partnership with Palantir Technologies and TWG AI.

Polymarket said the new platform will promote the trust, transparency, and reliability that participants, institutions, and the public deserve from prediction markets.

The sports integrity platform will be based on the Vergence AI engine created last year through a joint venture between Palantir and TWG AI and aims to establish a new standard for sports integrity controls aimed at preventing, identifying, and reporting anomalous or suspicious activity.

“Our partnership with Palantir and TWG AI allows us to apply world-class analytics and monitoring to sports markets while building tools that can help leagues and teams maintain confidence in the games themselves,” said Polymarket founder and chief executive Shayne Coplan. “Our goal has always been to give fans new ways to engage with the sports they love while ensuring those markets can grow responsibly on a global scale.”

Dr. Alex Karp, co-founder and CEO of Palantir Technologies, commented: “Our partnership sets a new standard for prediction markets, and we are excited to be at the center of that transformation. Together, we are strengthening the security and integrity of the platform — ensuring that as the sports prediction market continues to expand, Polymarket and TWG AI are positioned to lead with the confidence and competitiveness needed to scale.”

The features of the new platform include pre-trade and post-trade integrity monitoring, near real-time anomaly detection, screening against restricted participant datasets, and automated generation of trade alerts.

“Market integrity isn’t a feature you bolt on after the fact — it has to be engineered into the foundation of how an exchange operates,” said Drew Cukor, global head of AI at TWG AI. “Our approach is building the surveillance models, identity screening, and detection frameworks from the ground up, designed specifically for the unique risk profile of sports prediction markets.”