Resolution criteria on PolyGram: This market will resolve to “Yes” if Amazon Web services experiences any service interruption event with a severity classification of “disrupted” by June 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No.” The severity classification of an AWS service interruption event may be found on the AWS Health Dashboard (https://health.aws.amazon.com/health/status) when the relevant event is selected under “List of events.” Only publicly visible service events listed on the AWS Health Dashboard status page qualify. Account-specific AWS Health events do not count.
PolyGram is an on-chain prediction market where you trade YES or NO outcome shares with real USDC on Polygon. For this market, buy YES if you believe the event will happen, or NO if you think it won't. Your maximum loss is your stake — winning shares pay $1.00 each at resolution. Unlike sportsbooks, there is no house edge: prices are set by supply and demand from other traders and reflect the crowd's real-time probability.
Market outcomes
| AWS service disrupted by June 30? | 39% YES | 61% NO |
Amazon Web Services must experience at least one publicly documented service disruption event—classified as "disrupted" severity on the AWS Health Dashboard—between now and 30 June 2026 for this market to resolve affirmatively. The resolution criteria are narrow: only incidents visible on the public AWS Health Dashboard status page qualify, excluding account-specific alerts. The settlement window spans approximately 18 months from the current date.
AWS has maintained a track record of high availability, though significant outages do occur periodically. The 2021 us-east-1 region outage lasted several hours and affected numerous services; the 2022 DynamoDB incident in us-east-1 similarly qualified as a major disruption. These events typically occur once every 12–24 months across AWS's global infrastructure, suggesting a baseline expectation of at least one "disrupted" classification event within an 18-month window. The current 43% implied probability on Polymarket's order book reflects moderate confidence that AWS will experience such an incident before the deadline, balancing the company's engineering investments against the statistical likelihood of infrastructure failures at scale.
Traders should monitor AWS's expansion into new regions and services, which increases surface area for potential failures. Recent announcements regarding AI infrastructure buildout and increased capacity deployments may introduce operational complexity. Additionally, any major cloud provider incidents—particularly those affecting competitors like Azure or Google Cloud—often precede similar AWS events, as they expose systemic vulnerabilities across the industry. The AWS re:Invent conference schedule and quarterly earnings calls typically provide visibility into infrastructure changes that could affect reliability metrics.
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Resolution is handled by the UMA optimistic oracle on Polygon. A proposer submits the outcome, a two-hour dispute window opens, and if no one stakes a counter-claim the payout is final. Contested outcomes escalate to UMA token-holder voting. Payouts clear in USDC to the winning side.
The mechanics for trading "AWS service disrupted by June 30?" are the same as any other PolyGram event contract. Each YES share resolves to $1 if the event happens, or $0 if it doesn't. The current price between 0¢ and 100¢ is the market's probability estimate, set live by the order book.
$5K in lifetime turnover and $892 of resting liquidity puts this market in the below the median by volume for tech contracts on PolyGram. Order-book depth is thin — large orders may need to be split across the book or executed as limit orders.
Last 24 hours alone saw $144 in turnover, consistent with the market's lifetime daily-average pace.
The market has been open for under a month — fresh enough that information asymmetry remains a real factor.
Higher-volume markets tend to have tighter spreads and faster price discovery — meaning the displayed YES/NO percentages are more likely to reflect the true crowd-implied probability rather than a single trader's directional view.
As of today, traders on Polymarket price this outcome at 39%. The number updates continuously as the order book clears. PolyGram mirrors the same live odds with locale-aware formatting and USDC settlement.
Resolution is handled by the UMA optimistic oracle on Polygon. A proposer submits the outcome, a 2-hour dispute window opens, and if uncontested the payout is final. Contested outcomes escalate to UMA token holders.
This prediction market is scheduled to close on 30 June 2026. After the resolving event occurs, settlement typically clears within 24 hours once the UMA optimistic oracle confirms the outcome. All payouts are in USDC on the Polygon network.
To trade on this prediction market, create a free PolyGram account at polygram.ink, deposit USDC via Polygon, and place a YES or NO order on the outcome you believe in. You can learn more on our how-it-works page. Your maximum loss is limited to your stake — there is no leverage or margin.
When the outcome is determined, winning YES shares pay out $1.00 each in USDC, while losing shares pay $0. Settlement is handled by the UMA optimistic oracle on Polygon — a proposer submits the result, a two-hour dispute window opens, and if uncontested, payouts are distributed automatically. You can withdraw your winnings to any Polygon wallet.
Prediction-market positions can lose 100% of staked capital. Outcomes are uncertain by definition — historical accuracy of crowd-implied probabilities is high in aggregate but not for any single market. PolyGram does not provide investment advice. Trade only with capital you can afford to lose.
Regulatory status varies by jurisdiction. Germany, the United States, and most EU countries treat Polymarket-style event contracts under one of three frameworks: financial derivative, gambling product, or unregulated novel asset. Consult local counsel before trading.
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