First: I am NOT an ARista!
Second: I do have issues with people attempting to turn wild animals into pets, wolves included. It's taking an undomesticated animal and removing it from the environement from which it was bred to live in and enjoy, and shoving it in a fenced-in backyard and forcing it to comply with various humans wanting to gawk and pet it all for the sake of "cooooool!".
Third: Heaven forbid some wolf, or tiger, attacks a human responsible for caring for it. It then gets to be killed and people wonder why on earth such a beloved animal would do such a horrible thing to it's human cuddle partner.
I've met a single wolf hybrid (wolf-dog...whatever PC name they have). It was brought in by someone and dumped at the clinic. The dog was tall, lean, shaggy, long muzzle, and in looks, resembled a wolf more than a dog. It did not look like some thick, blocky Siberian Husky or Malamute (they types we see in this part of the region). The "dog" had these yellowish/goldish/flecked eyes. It was wary and did everything it could to slink into the wall (it tried to get the wall to absorb it). Thankfully, this was a young one. One of the vets took it home with her as she lives in a wooded area and has a large (6 acres) fenced-in backyard with an 8-ft chain-link fence with hotwire at the top. When I went to her place to visit Mowgli, he stayed at the vet back of the property near his man-made den. He was nice-enough, and by that I man he wasn't some foaming-at-the-mouth aggressive animal. He would watch you put his food out, and then wait for you to get back up to the house before getting his food and taking it to his "den". He got along wonderfully well with her Alaskan Husky, and the two ended up being quite the soulmates (spayed female). Mowgli did get to where he would approach you every no and then, and would allow you to pet him, but the encounters were brief, although he was relaxed during them. But I would never ever say he was some social butterfuly that wanted to cuddle you on the couch....or cuddle you in general. He passed away not long ago, but at least he was given the chance to live his life without being forced to conform to the pressures that some humans place on these animals (to be wonderful fluffy pets).