thanks matt, i completely ignored the sea we swim in, that all primes > 2 are odd! (They seem also mostly to avoid numbers ending in 5, on first experimentation.)
so randomness seems to mean within those restrictions allowed by "Dirichlet", i.e. integers congruent to 1,3,7,9, mod 10.
e.g. primes are evenly distributed in those equivalence classes, asymptotically.
So the theorem on primes in arithmetic distributions is one of the first big results on some randomness of primes.
In a way, most of the results I know on primes are sort of randomness statements.
I.e. Euclid says no matter how far out you go you keep finding them.
then there are all the results that an infinite number of primes exist congruent to 3 mod4, and also congruent to 1 mod 4, and finally dirichlet sums these results all up together, with a randomness result that says the modulus and the remainder are irrelevant beyond being relatively prime.
but now we go in the other direction, with gauss's conjecture, the prime number theorem, that primes look sort of like the graph of that function Li(x)?
then Helmut Maier and others have theorems i need to check out that may describe other special behavior of primes.hmmm... good, enlightening question, at least for me, helping put known results in context.
by the way, if you believe primes are truly randomly distributed, within known elementary restrictions, then I guess the twin prime conjecture should be true.
indeed maybe gauss's prime number theorem conjecture, is also just a pattern based on elementary restrictions arising from seive constructions.
i don't know anything about it, but if you think about it, the process of seiving should place a restriction on the pattern of primes up to a certain limit.
i.e. the first step, crossing out even numbers, gives matt's observation against true randomness, then the next integer, namely 3 has to be prime, and the second step is crossing out all multiples of three.
then we must eliminate 2,4 and 3,6, which leaves 5,...,
this seems to completely determine the pattern of primes, but in a very complicated way, which may be approximated in the prime number theorem.
but i am a total novice here.