Coinbase AI Declares Norway World Cup Winner Before Kickoff as Armstrong Orders Review

CN
2 hours ago

Key Takeaways

  • A Coinbase alert claimed Norway beat Brazil 3-2, with two Erling Haaland goals, before its July 5 kickoff.
  • Brian Armstrong replied within hours, stating that he is “taking a look with the team.”
  • The slip lands as New York recently sued Coinbase and World Cup prediction volumes have topped $3.9B.

Coinbase declared that Norway had defeated Brazil 3-2 with striker Erling Haaland scoring twice. The problem was that the match, scheduled for Sunday at Metlife Stadium in New Jersey, had not started and Coinbase’s own market page listed the fixture under a weather delay at the time.

Coinbase's incorrect post claiming Norway had defeated Brazil.

Coinbase’s incorrect post claiming Norway had defeated Brazil before the match had even begun.

Screenshots of the alert spread quickly across X, where the story was circulated widely by crypto media accounts, with one user writing:

“This is what happens when a crypto company uses AI to generate sports prediction markets. Coinbase is hallucinating results for a World Cup game that hasn’t even been played yet and sending factually incorrect notifications to its millions of users as ‘breaking news.'”

Armstrong acknowledged the reports within hours. “Taking a look with the team – thx for reporting it,” the Coinbase chief executive wrote in reply.

The blunder is awkward for a company that has made prediction markets a pillar of its expansion. Armstrong has repeatedly promoted the products as “the ultimate form of truth seeking,” arguing that when there is skin in the game, the output is far more reliable than punditry.

Coinbase offers event contracts through its Everything Exchange, with market flow provided by prediction market operator Kalshi at launch, and has rolled the product out across all 50 U.S. states. The push is part of a broader transformation that has seen the first crypto-native company in the S&P 500 complete 10 acquisitions in 2025 and position itself as a global market operator rather than a pure crypto exchange.

Lastly, sports markets have been the sector’s engine during the 2026 World Cup, with Bitcoin.com News reporting that Polymarket’s tournament market alone has topped $3.9 billion in volume, with France’s title odds at 35%.

The timing is delicate on the legal front as well, given that New York recently sued Coinbase and Gemini over their prediction market offerings, and the products’ regulatory perimeter is still being contested in Washington. Coinbase has urged the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to treat prediction markets under the existing derivatives framework, arguing the agency needs no new mandate to oversee them.

A consumer-facing error of this kind hands critics a concrete exhibit and what happens next depends on Coinbase’s postmortem. Armstrong’s team has yet to explain how the alert cleared its checks, whether AI-generated notifications will be paused for the rest of the World Cup, or what safeguards will be added. Interesting times ahead, to say the least!

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