[these resolution criteria are a work in progress for the next several days and may change. caveat mercator]
This market resolves to YES if during 2025:
People's Republic of China or affiliated military or maritime forces physically prevent vessel access to any of Taiwan's main ports (Kaohsiung, Keelung, Taichung, Taipei, or Hualien)
One of the following sources confirms a "blockade": AP, Reuters, Financial Times, NYT, Taiwan Defense Ministry, US Defense Department, Japan Defense Ministry, or NATO
Edge Cases:
"Military exercises" that meet the above criteria DO count, even if labeled as exercises
Blockades starting in 2025 and extending to 2026 COUNT
Failed blockades COUNT if China made a clear attempt meeting the criteria, even if Taiwan/allies successfully defended against it
Blockade of outlying islands only (Kinmen, Matsu, Penghu) does NOT count
Cyber attacks or economic sanctions alone DO NOT count without physical maritime enforcement
Can you add "and" to clarify the 2 points under "This market resolves to YES if during 2025:"?
Suppose that an announced blockade / "we're not calling it a blockade for reasons" (like a Maritime Exclusion Zone) is seen as sufficiently credible that third-country civilian shipping drops precipitously without a single physical enforcement action by PRC-affiliated forces. How do you want this question to resolve? (Though maybe the US would use escorted convoys for allied shipping.)
Point 2 ties back to @ian's point about verifying reduction of maritime traffic, which seems closer to what we actually want to measure โ physical enforcement is possibly more a means to an end.
Does anyone have access to either Taiwan International Ports Corporation's official website for eg. cargo throughput statistics for the Port of Kaohsiung, or MarineTraffic.com?
Seems like way too many words, I think all you need is #3.
How are you going to verify:
The blockade must reduce maritime traffic to affected ports by at least 50% compared to the average daily vessel count from the preceding 30 days
Who cares about this if it's in fact a blockade. What if it's 51 miles?
Maritime interference must occur within 50 nautical miles of Taiwan's coastline
Why at least 3 ports?
@SG good way to stay objective is to not bet on your own markets. I would also advise against deferring your resolution criteria to LLMs, that's how we got an in-browser demo to count as "millions of downloads of AI game".
https://manifold.markets/CDBiddulph/will-a-video-game-with-airendered-g-2e37a190fefe