Springer Nature Book 'Social, Ethical and Legal Aspects of Generative AI: Tools, Techniques and Systems' Reportedly Published With Numerous Purportedly Fabricated or Unverifiable Citations
June 17, 2025
This incident underscores the need for robust guardrails for AI systems and a comprehensive AI incident database like that offered by Project Cerebellum. By mapping and measuring such incidents, we can better understand, prevent harm, and create safer and more secure AI environments.
Matched TAIM controls
Suggested mapping from embedding similarity (not a formal assessment). Browse all TAIM controls
- MAP 4.1 — similarity 0.661, rank 1. TAIM detail and related incidents →
- MEASURE 2.10 — similarity 0.649, rank 2. TAIM detail and related incidents →
- MAP 1.6 — similarity 0.648, rank 3. TAIM detail and related incidents →
- Alleged deployer
- srikanta-patnaik, jair-minoro-abe, kazumi-nakamatsu, francesco-vigliarolo, springer-nature, unnamed-chapter-authors
- Alleged developer
- unknown-large-language-model-developers, unknown-generative-ai-developers
- Alleged harmed parties
- academic-researchers, ai-researchers, readers-of-academic-and-technical-publications, students, epistemic-integrity
Source
Data from the AI Incident Database (AIID). Cite this incident: https://incidentdatabase.ai/cite/1309
Data source
Incident data is from the AI Incident Database (AIID).
When citing the database as a whole, please use:
McGregor, S. (2021) Preventing Repeated Real World AI Failures by Cataloging Incidents: The AI Incident Database. In Proceedings of the Thirty-Third Annual Conference on Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence (IAAI-21). Virtual Conference.
Pre-print on arXiv · Database snapshots & citation guide
We use weekly snapshots of the AIID for stable reference. For the official suggested citation of a specific incident, use the “Cite this incident” link on each incident page.