Greenbaum, Gerstein: Can AI developers avoid Frankenstein’s fateful mistake?

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Audiences already know the story of Frankenstein. The gothic novel — adapted dozens of times, most recently in director Guillermo del Toro’s haunting revival now available on Netflix— is embedded in our cultural DNA as the cautionary tale of science gone wrong. But popular culture misreads author Mary Shelley’s warning. The lesson isn’t “don’t create dangerous things.” It’s “don’t walk away from what you create.”

This distinction matters: The fork in the road comes after creation, not before.

All powerful technologies can become destructive — the choice between outcomes lies in stewardship or abdication. Victor Frankenstein’s sin wasn’t simply bringing life to a grotesque creature. It was refusing to raise it, insisting that the consequences were someone else’s problem. Every generation produces its Victors. Ours work in artificial intelligence.

Recently, a California appeals court fined an attorney $10,000 after 21 of 23 case citations in their brief proved to be AI fabrications — nonexistent precedents. Hundreds of similar instances have been documented nationwide, growing from a few cases a month to a few cases a day. This summer, a Georgia appeals court vacated a divorce ruling after discovering that 11 of 15 citations were AI fabrications. How many more went undetected, ready to corrupt the legal record?

The problem runs deeper than irresponsible deployment. For decades, computer systems were provably correct — a pocket calculator can consistently offer users the mathematically correct answers every time. Engineers could demonstrate how an algorithm would behave. Failures meant implementation errors, not uncertainty about the system itself.

Modern AI changes that paradigm. A recent study reported in Science confirms what AI experts have long known: plausible falsehoods — what the industry calls “hallucinations” — are inevitable in these systems. They’re trained to predict what sounds plausible, not to verify what’s true. When confident answers aren’t justified, the systems guess anyway. Their training rewards confidence over uncertainty. As one AI researcher quoted in the report put it, fixing this would “kill the product.”

This creates a fundamental veracity problem. These systems work by extracting patterns from vast training datasets — patterns so numerous and interconnected that even their designers cannot reliably predict what they’ll produce. We can only observe how they actually behave in practice, sometimes not until well after damage is done.

This unpredictability creates cascading consequences. These failures don’t disappear, they become permanent. Every legal fabrication that slips in undetected enters databases as precedent. Fake medical advice spreads across health sites. AI-generated “news” circulates through social media. This synthetic content is even scraped back into training data for future models. Today’s hallucinations become tomorrow’s facts.

So how do we address this without stifling innovation? We already have a model in pharmaceuticals. Drug companies cannot be certain of all biological effects in advance, so they test extensively, with most drugs failing before reaching patients. Even approved drugs face unexpected real-world problems. That’s why continuous monitoring remains essential. AI needs a similar framework.

Responsible stewardship — the opposite of Victor Frankenstein’s abandonment — requires three interconnected pillars.

First: prescribed training standards

Drug manufacturers must control ingredients, document production practices and conduct quality testing. AI companies should face parallel requirements: documented provenance for training data, with contamination monitoring to prevent reuse of problematic synthetic content, prohibited content categories and bias testing across demographics. Pharmaceutical regulators require transparency while current AI companies need to disclose little.

Second: pre-deployment testing

Drugs undergo extensive trials before reaching patients. Randomized controlled trials were a major achievement, developed to demonstrate safety and efficacy. Most fail. That’s the point. Testing catches subtle dangers before deployment. AI systems for high-stakes applications, including legal research, medical advice and financial management, need structured testing to document error rates and establish safety thresholds.

Third: continuous surveillance after deployment

Drug companies are obligated to track adverse events of their products and report them to regulators. In turn, the regulators can mandate warnings, restrictions or withdrawal when problems emerge. AI needs equivalent oversight.

Why does this need regulation rather than voluntary compliance? Because AI systems are fundamentally different from traditional tools. A hammer doesn’t pretend to be a carpenter. AI systems do, projecting authority through confident prose, whether retrieving or fabricating facts. Without regulatory requirements, companies optimizing for engagement will necessarily sacrifice accuracy for market share.

The trick is regulating without crushing innovation. The EU’s AI Act shows how hard that is. Under the Act, companies building high-risk AI systems must document how their systems work, assess risks and monitor them closely. A small startup might spend more on lawyers and paperwork than on building the actual product. Big companies with legal teams can handle this. Small teams can’t.

Pharmaceutical regulation shows the same pattern. Post-market surveillance prevented tens of thousands of deaths when the FDA discovered that Vioxx — an arthritis medication prescribed to more than 80 million patients worldwide — doubled the risk of heart attacks. Still, billion-dollar regulatory costs mean only large companies can compete, and beneficial treatments for rare diseases, perhaps best tackled by small biotechs, go undeveloped.

Graduated oversight addresses this problem, scaling requirements and costs with demonstrated harm. An AI assistant with low error rates gets extra monitoring. Higher rates trigger mandatory fixes. Persistent problems? Pull it from the market until it’s fixed. Companies either improve their systems to stay in business, or they exit. Innovation continues, but now there’s more accountability.

Responsible stewardship cannot be voluntary. Once you create something powerful, you’re responsible for it. The question isn’t whether to build advanced AI systems — we’re already building them. The question is whether we’ll require the careful stewardship those systems demand.

The pharmaceutical framework — prescribed training standards, structured testing, continuous surveillance — offers a proven model for critical technologies we cannot fully predict. Shelley’s lesson was never about the creation itself. It was about what happens when creators walk away. Two centuries later, as Del Toro’s adaptation reaches millions this month, the lesson remains urgent. This time, with synthetic intelligence rapidly spreading through our society, we might not get another chance to choose the other path.

Dov Greenbaum is professor of law and director of the Zvi Meitar Institute for Legal Implications of Emerging Technologies at Reichman University in Israel. Mark Gerstein is the Albert L. Williams Professor of Biomedical Informatics at Yale University. They wrote this column for the Los Angeles Times.

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Frederick: Timberwolves were good Wednesday. That doesn’t cut it against the Thunder

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Minnesota shot 46% from 3-point range on Wednesday in Oklahoma City.

The Timberwolves out-rebounded the Thunder by four. They shot three more free throws than Oklahoma City when discounting the four the Thunder shot in the game’s final 30 seconds via intentional fouls.

Anthony Edwards scored 31 points — his 100th career 30-plus point performance. The Wolves had six players score in double figures, including Terrence Shannon Jr.’s 18 off the bench via his perfect shooting performance.

Minnesota even largely limited its turnovers — and it lost 113-105 to the league-leading Thunder. The loss eliminated the Wolves from NBA Cup contention, marking the third time in the event’s three year history that Minnesota failed to reach the knockout stage.

Oklahoma City is now 18-1, and its second-best player — All-NBA wing Jalen Williams — has yet to touch the court this season.

Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) drives against Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) during the first half of an Emirates NBA Cup basketball game, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Gerald Leong)

The Wolves played good basketball in defeat. Good is not going to get it done against the defending champions. Perfection may in fact be required to beat Oklahoma City.

Is that attainable?

It’s a question Minnesota is likely asking itself after Wednesday’s loss, the team’s third straight. A major culprit in all three defeats has been late-game execution. No, there was no big lead coughed up in Oklahoma City like the ones Minnesota blew in Phoenix and Sacramento.

But the Wolves did have possession in a tie game with three minutes to play against the Thunder when Donte DiVincenzo had the ball poked away by Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, which led to a layup going the other way.

The next trip down the floor, Jaden McDaniels picked up his dribble as he looked to get the ball to Edwards, who was unable to shake Casson Wallace. Needing to avoid a five-second call, McDaniels threw a jump ball to Julius Randle, which was batted away by Lu Dort.

Then, with 27 seconds to play and Minnesota down five, Randle was unable to get the inbound in on time when his primary target, Edwards, was denied by Gilgeous-Alexander.

On top of all that, Minnesota missed 15 free throws.

Minnesota’s execution isn’t near the level it has to be at when that’s what’s required. So even on the nights when everything aligns for the Wolves to have a chance to put a team away or win a game at the end, they currently cannot capitalize.

Sure, there are things Minnesota can hope are better in future matchups with the Thunder.

Randle went 2 for 13 on Wednesday. The Wolves expect more production from the forward, who was playing at an all-star level this season prior to Minnesota’s last three games. But Wednesday marked Randle’s third time making two shots or fewer in his last six games against Oklahoma City.

Sixteen turnovers may feel like something that can be cleaned up, but the Thunder’s pressure defense compromises your decision making. It’s why Oklahoma City tends to go on avalanche-like runs against opponents, and had won its previous nine games by 13-plus points.

The Timberwolves checked many of the boxes required to avoid that type of wipeout and stick with Oklahoma City for 48 minutes. There are plenty of positives to draw from that. It has to be reassuring for Minnesota that should it play to that standard of effort and gameplan discipline, it can beat 28 teams in the NBA.

But can it beat the Thunder, particularly when it matters most?

It’s the ultimate question for everyone in the Western Conference, and the NBA at-large.

The Magic 8-Ball reading for Minnesota: “Outlook not so good.”

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Wild escape Chicago with OT win after Blackhawks dominate early

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Folks headed out on the road for Thanksgiving will tell you that sometimes you need to weather a storm to get where you need to be.

On Thanksgiving Eve in Chicago, the Minnesota Wild weathered a storm of pucks, trailing by a pair of goals at one point, but rallying for a 4-3 overtime win over the Blackhawks in their first meeting of the season.

Kirill Kaprizov’s power-play goal in the extra session came on just his second shot of the game but lifted the Wild to a 10-1-1 record in November.

The Wild got goals from Brock Faber, Nico Sturm and Matt Boldy to get to overtime. But their MVP of the evening was goalie Filip Gustavsson, who was busy start to finish, recording 34 saves and keeping the game from getting out of hand with the Blackhawks throwing everything his way early.

“Found a way to get it done. Not our best, I think everyone knows that, but good teams find ways to win,” Boldy said to reporters at the United Center. “A lot of credit to Gus for keeping us in it, and yeah, found a way.”

It was the sixth consecutive win for the Wild.

Both teams were 2 for 2 on the penalty kill in a scoreless first period, which was mostly due to Gustavsson. Chicago sent an eye-popping 20 shots his way — the busiest period for a Minnesota goalie this season — but none of them got through.

“We weren’t sharp, but he was really sharp early,” Wild coach John Hynes said, in praise of his goalie. “He gave us the opportunity to continue to push and get ourselves playing the way that we need to play. And it was off and on. But like I said, I think every night, you might not be at your best, but the mindset of the group tonight is something that I think we can draw on moving forward, that you got to keep fighting and keep battling, regardless of what happens, and you got to try to make a game of it.”

The Blackhawks onslaught continued unabated in the middle frame, with Minnesota killing another penalty but surrendering the first goal when Wild defenseman Zeev Buium arrived just a half-second too late to contest a shot in the low slot.

The Chicago goal snapped a run of more than 505 minutes that the Wild had gone without trailing, and it also ended their franchise record run of 12 consecutive games where Minnesota had scored first.

The dearth of offense led the Wild to do some line rearranging, with Kaprizov getting some extra shifts in hopes of testing the Chicago goalie more often. Instead it was Blackhawks star forward Connor Bedard doubling lead with a bang-bang play at the net-front.

There was some lousy puck luck that cost the Wild a power-play goal when Kaprizov’s tip at the net front slipped under Chicago goalie Spencer Knight, but the puck came to rest on — but not over — the goal line. Chicago appeared to make it 3-0 a few shifts later, but the Wild successfully challenged the play for offside.

Trailing by multiple goals for the first time in November, the Wild finally broke through in the final seconds of the period when a Faber shot from the blue line deflected off a Chicago player and fluttered through the air, off the post and in. It was the third goal in the past four games for Faber, who is on pace for a career-best season offensively.

The Wild finally forged a tie early in the third when Sturm tipped a Jonas Brodin shot past Knight. It was Sturm’s first goal in his second game of the season since returning from back surgery. But Chicago defenseman Artyom Levshunov’s first career goal gave the lead back to the Blackhawks. Briefly.

After Marcus Johansson was thwarted on a breakaway, Boldly made it 3-all in the latter half of the third with his team-leading 14th of the season.

“It’s obviously a sign that things are going well when you win games that maybe you were not supposed to, from the way the game worked,” Sturm said. “In the second intermission, we talked about how huge the power plays and how we wanted to generate momentum. Obviously, not the way we envisioned it but at the end of the day, we came away with the points. But we’re not, like, kidding ourselves in here. We know that it was not our best game today.”

In the overtime, Joel Eriksson Ek was leveled by a check in the neutral zone, with the puck far enough away from the play to warrant an interference call. With a 4-on-3 advantage in overtime, the strategy was simple: Get the puck to Kaprizov.

They did, and he scored, tying Zach Parise’s franchise record for career power-play goals with 69.

Wild forward Marcus Foligno left the game in the second period, favoring his leg after getting tied up with a Blackhawks player near the net. Hynes said he is unsure of Foligno’s status with back-to-back home games on Friday and Saturday upcoming.

Knight finished with 20 saves for the Blackhawks, who make their first visit St. Paul on Jan. 27.

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Falling tree kills northeastern Minnesota man clearing snow after storm

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A northeastern Minnesota man was killed by a falling tree while out clearing snow Wednesday morning in rural St. Louis County, according to the county sheriff’s office.

Brian Pelander, 69, died after the sheriff’s office said that high winds and heavy snow caused a tree to give way at his property in the 7400 block of Laine Road in Alden Township, north of Knife River.

First responders were called at 10:22 a.m. Pelander’s wife reported she left for approximately 45 minutes as Pelander was out with a snowblower. She returned to find Pelander under a large downed tree, according to the sheriff’s office.

The season’s first major winter storm brought up to 10 inches of heavy, wet snow to the Arrowhead. Accumulations diminished to the south, with the Twin Cities officially measuring 3.1 inches.

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