The Vibranium Labs founding team

Vibranium Labs, a New York-based startup founded by a veteran team from top tech companies, has secured $4.6 million in seed funding to launch Vibe AI, an autonomous AI engineer designed to monitor, diagnose, and fix IT incidents around the clock. 

This AI-powered technology aims to reduce outages and downtime caused particularly by vibe-coding errors, by acting as a reliable, 24/7 teammate that is in charge of accelerating incident resolution.

In industries where every minute of downtime costs millions, like in finance, healthcare, defense, and retail, Vibranium’s Vibe AI offers a transformative solution to an increasingly urgent problem – how to manage and remediate software failures faster and without exhausting human engineers. 

Founded by Tim Hwang, Sang Lee, Charles Kim, and Tanny Kang, who have all worked in a number of big techs including Google and Amazon Web Services (AWS), Vibe AI was built to address what they described as “the biggest fear in the world” for software engineers. 

“We had our own personal issues where we were waking up at 2 a.m. in the middle of the night getting pinged by an alert saying that some service or some API is down and degraded,” Sang Lee told Business Insider. 

Through its integration into tools engineers are already familiar with (PagerDuty, Jira, Datadog, Slack, AWS), and acting as what Vibranium Labs termed a “sixth engineer,” Vibe AI offers “faster resolution, reduced downtime, and stronger customer trust in an always-on digital world,” the startup told Alleywatch. 

The $4.6M funding will help Vibranium Labs further scale Vibe AI into an AI Site Reliability Engineer (AI SRE) and a 24/7 AI incident engineer. 

Vibe AI As A New Kind of Site Reliability Engineer

Unlike traditional tools that simply alert human engineers of downtimes or errors, Vibe AI detects outages and degradations in real-time. As a Site Reliability Engineer that leverages agentic AI, the technology also performs triages and root-cause analysis, as well as executes remediation steps automatically. 

The importance of this innovation in the coding space comes on the heels of the rise of AI-generated code, which is otherwise known as vibe-coding. While vibe-coding is known for a seamless, AI-assisted software development approach, it also introduces new layers of brittleness, complexity, and vulnerability. 

Vibe AI was built by Vibranium Labs as a solution to this recurring problem. It acts as a safeguard, catching failures before they escalate and reducing alerts that stresses developer teams. 

“We realized that incident response hasn’t fundamentally changed in decades – it’s still a handful of senior engineers pulled from sleep or family to fix issues under enormous pressure,” the startup said in an interview with AlleyWatch. “We started Vibranium Labs to end that chaos and build an AI teammate that could shoulder the load alongside engineers, not replace them.”

The founders also highlighted IT downtimes or outages as a pain point in which Vibe AI offers solutions to. Downtime costs businesses globally over $400 billion annually, and today’s tech stacks are growing more complex with AI-generated code playing an ever-larger role. 

“Every outage carries hidden costs, lost revenue, shaken confidence, and eroded trust,” Lee said. “For years, incident response has followed the same script – a senior engineer getting jolted awake at 2 a.m. on a Saturday, scrambling to join a bridge call, juggling Slack threads, Jira tickets, and Datadog dashboards just to piece together what went wrong.

“They spend hours sifting through logs, trying to recall if a similar incident happened months ago, while customers wait and revenue bleeds. It’s stressful, inefficient, and unsustainable.”

To address this, Vibe AI was built to automate detection, analysis, and even remediation. 

Conversely, the founders also highlighted how Vibe AI is not meant to replace engineers and software developers. This contrasts to the ongoing conversation of how vibe-coding is meant to replace human developers and eventually take their jobs.

Instead, Vibranium Labs affirms that Vibe AI was built to “empower” these human developers and engineers to avoid downtimes that cost money and enhance “speed and clarity of incident response,” as they remain critical to businesses. 

Funding And Fueling Next-Gen Innovation

Vibranium Labs’ seed funding round was led by Calibrate Ventures and Mirae Asset, with participation from a16z, Franklin Templeton, Plug and Play, Gaingels, Wildcard Capital, FalconX, and DCG.

The round was reportedly closed within two months, which highlights the high interest in AI and vibe-coding from investors in the tech space. 

With this funding, Vibranium Labs plans to accelerate product development and innovation, as well as expand its engineering and go-to-market sales teams.

Additionally, the investors have high confidence in the startup’s vision to build an efficient AI teammate, as the founding team have direct experience from previously working in big techs like Google, AWS, Fiscal Note

What Comes Next?

As Vibranium Labs continue to scale Vibe AI, there’s an expectation for AI-powered incident management software to become a strategic infrastructure pillar, especially as more businesses adopt more AI tools that accelerate development cycles but introduce new risks. 

However, while this funding signals a strong investor confidence in an AI solution built to end outage chaos and transform reliability engineering, what remains to be seen is if Vibe AI’s approach will become the new standard for managing AI-influenced software environments. 

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I’m Precious Amusat, Phronews’ Content Writer. I conduct in-depth research and write on the latest developments in the tech industry, including trends in big tech, startups, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and their global impacts. When I’m off the clock, you’ll find me cheering on women’s footy, curled up with a romance novel, or binge-watching crime thrillers.

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