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Russia-Linked ‘GreyVibe’ Attackers Use AI to Supercharge Cyberattacks

The Russia-linked GreyVibe threat actor uses generative AI tools like ChatGPT and Gemini to accelerate and scale its operations, including crafting spear-phishing lures, developing custom malware like LegionRelay, and generating post-compromise tooling. The group primarily targets Ukrainian entities, and its AI-driven approach allows it to operate with greater sophistication and a fresher operational profile than its inherent technical skill would suggest, complicating tracking and attribution.
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Artificial Intelligence Russia-Linked ‘GreyVibe’ Attackers Use AI to Supercharge Cyberattacks Researchers warn GreyVibe’s extensive use of ChatGPT, Gemini, and other AI tools offers a glimpse into how future cybercriminal and state-aligned groups will operate. By Kevin Townsend | May 28, 2026 (2:50 PM ET) Flipboard Reddit Whatsapp Whatsapp Email Attackers use AI to increase velocity, scale and sophistication. Just as AI is improving, so will attackers’ use of it. GreyVibe is one to watch. GreyVibe, a previously undocumented threat actor, is described by WithSecure as a Russia-nexus group. The researchers are confident in their attribution of GreyVibe to Russian-speaking operators in the Moscow time zone, but are less certain whether the group is cybercriminal, nation-state – or a mix of the two. The primary focus of the group, targeting Ukrainian military, government, civilian, and business entities since August 2025, aligns closely with Russian state interests. At the same time, the researchers have detected numerous indications that at least some GreyVibe members may be socially less than optimum elite state operators – including, for example, their use of Internet slang-based naming conventions across early-stage development artefacts, such as ‘letsrollboyos’, ‘totallyunsus’, and ‘cuteuwu’. Another clue that may suggest GreyVibe is not a pure state actor comes from its intensive use of AI across every phase of its operations, “from building fake websites and crafting lures to developing custom malware and generating post-compromise tooling,” say the researchers. Their report adds resource development including obfuscation and loader scripts, and post-compromise scripts. This itself means nothing, since all bad actors are using AI to add velocity and scale to their attacks. However, while the researchers detected the use of top tier AI including Ideogram AI, ChatGPT, and Google Gemini, GreyVibe introduced design flaws into its LLM-generated LegionRelay Windows malware. Mistakes are not something normally attributed to elite actors. This mistake enabled WithSecure researchers to monitor and track GreyVibe activity over an extended period since mid-2025. Such mistakes are not expected from elite attackers, and this may be why Mohammad Kazem Hassan Nejad, senior threat intelligence researcher at WithSecure adds, “What sets GREYVIBE apart is not raw technical skill, but operational ambition powered by AI. The group uses generative AI to punch above its weight – accelerating development, filling capability gaps, and generating a largely fresh operational profile that complicates tracking and attribution. It’s a preview of how lower-sophistication actors will increasingly operate.” Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading. The initial lures and approaches from GreyVibe are varied and heavily supported by AI. Spear-phishing emails (at least six distinct campaigns, but with no mention of deepfakes) directed victims to ZIP or RAR archives on third-party file-sharing services such as Google Drive and 4sync. These would launch a decoy file to take the user’s attention while simultaneously initiating a PhantomRelay (Windows malware) infection chain in the background. A separate campaign, which the researchers call PrincessClub, used fake adult-club websites to deliver Fallspy (Android malware) and PhantomRelay or LegionRelay on Windows. Victims were further lured to the lure by fake female personas using Telegram or dating sites to direct them. This extensive use of AI not only compensates for capability gaps within GreyVibe but also reduces ‘historical backlinks to prior activity’. In short, we cannot be certain the group hasn’t previously been tracked under a different name by other researchers – but WithSecure has found no evidence of this. What it has detected, however, is the use of a unique ISO builder potentially linked to the TrickBot ecosystem and UAC-0098 (an activity cluster likely involving former TrickBot members previously also observed targeting Ukraine). GreyVibe is still active, and its members are still unknown. Going forward, its AI expertise is likely to increase. “Given this extensive use, we expect the group’s tradecraft to continue evolving and diversifying, likely increasing the complexity of continuous detection, tracking, and attribution,” says WithSecure. Whether this might tempt the group to spread its activity beyond the current focus on Ukraine remains to be seen. If it really is closely aligned to Russian state activities, this is more than possible given the current state of global geopolitics. Related : UK Cyberspying Chief Calls AI ‘an Unstoppable Force’ and Warns About Russia Related : Admins of Bulletproof Hosting Service Used by Russian Hackers Arrested in Netherlands Related : Germany Suspects Russia Is Behind Signal Phishing That Targeted Top Officials Related : Sweden Blames Pro-Russian Group for Cyberattack Last Year on Its Energy Infrastructure Written By Kevin Townsend Kevin Townsend is a Senior Contributor at SecurityWeek. He has been writing about high tech issues since before the birth of Microsoft. For the last 15 years he has specialized in information security; and has had many thousands of articles published in dozens of different magazines – from The Times and the Financial Times to current and long-gone computer magazines. Daily Briefing Newsletter Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing for the latest cybersecurity threats, trends, and expert insights. 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