Artificial intelligence (AI) startup Vibranium Labs said on the 7th that it will target the domestic market with Vibe AI, an AI agent-based incident response platform.
Site reliability engineering (SRE) is an IT infrastructure operations approach defined by Google in 2003 that global major corporations are adopting to ensure service stability. However, critics have noted limits to response speed and efficiency because, when an incident occurs, engineers must check logs themselves and trace the cause.
To solve these problems, Vibranium Labs developed Vibe AI to replace existing on-call tools such as PagerDuty. When a server incident occurs, AI agents handle everything from paging engineers and analyzing causes to deriving response plans. They also present response measures by comprehensively analyzing past similar incidents and solutions and their impact on the current business.
Vibe AI is designed with a structure in which more than 13 AI agents collaborate around a central orchestration layer that oversees all agents. By training on more than 50,000 real security incidents, it achieved over 95% accuracy in incident priority triage.
As a result, Vibranium Labs was selected as an Amazon Web Services (AWS) AI Agent Marketplace partner alongside Salesforce, Inc. and Splunk, and secured tech corporations such as Shutterstock as customers, achieving up to an 80% reduction in incident recovery time.
With this entry into the domestic market, Vibranium Labs plans to expand its business focusing on cloud service corporations in gaming, video and streaming, and e-commerce, where stable service operations are essential.
Vibranium Labs was founded in New York, United States, in 2024 by CEO Lee Sang-man, who worked on large-scale infrastructure operations and incident response at Amazon and Google. Co-founders include Tim Hwang, who led FiscalNote's New York Stock Exchange listing; COO Taney Kang, an attorney from Princeton and the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School; and CTO Charles Kim, a developer who graduated from the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School and worked at Workday and Instacart.
Last year, Vibranium Labs raised a seed round of about 6.8 billion won just four months after founding from leading Silicon Valley investor Andreessen Horowitz, global asset manager Franklin Templeton, and Korea's Mirae Asset Venture Investment and Mirae Asset Capital.
Lee Sang-man, CEO of Vibranium Labs, said, "Technology has advanced rapidly, but IT incident response still relies heavily on people," adding, "Our goal is to quickly identify causes through AI agents and enhance on-call and incident management end to end so engineers can get out of repetitive tasks."