while a prediction market does incentivize feeding accurate information into the system
Not quite. Prediction markets allow you to bet on your forecasts and their aggregate output is just capital-weighted opinion of the participants. They incentivize being honest about one's forecasts, but that's a very different thing from "feeding accurate information".
No. If you forecast that the price of gold will go up, and the price instead goes down, then being honest about your forecast loses you money. Prediction markets reward people for making accurate predictions. Whether those predictions were an accurate reflection of beliefs is irrelevant.
Nick Szabo writes about the dangers of taking assumptions that are valid in small, self-contained games and applying them to larger, real-world "games," a practice he calls a small-game fallacy.
This last point, which he expands on later in the post, will be of particular interest to some readers of LW. The idea is that while a prediction market does incentivize feeding accurate information into the system, the existence of the market also gives rise to parallel external incentives. As Szabo glibly puts it,
Futarchy, it seems, will have some kinks to work out.