Stand-Alone Complex or Vibercrime? Exploring the adoption and innovation of GenAI tools, coding assistants, and agents within cybercrime ecosystems
Jack Hughes, Ben Collier, Daniel R. Thomas

TL;DR
This paper examines how generative AI tools are adopted in cybercrime, finding early use in passive schemes but limited disruption so far, with social factors playing a key role in skill acquisition.
Contribution
It introduces the concepts of Stand-Alone Complex and Vibercrime to categorize AI's impact on cybercrime ecosystems and provides empirical analysis of early adoption patterns.
Findings
AI is used mainly in passive income schemes and trivial frauds.
Low-skill actors find little utility in vibe coding tools.
Social learning remains central to hacking skill development.
Abstract
Existential risk scenarios relating to Generative Artificial Intelligence often involve advanced systems or agentic models breaking loose and using hacking tools to gain control over critical infrastructure. In this paper, we argue that the real threats posed by generative AI for cybercrime are rather different. We apply innovation theory and evolutionary economics - treating cybercrime as an ecosystem of small- and medium-scale tech start-ups, coining two novel terms that bound the upper and lower cases for disruption. At the high end, we propose the Stand-Alone Complex, in which cybercrime-gang-in-a-box solutions enable individual actors to largely automate existing cybercrime-as-a-service arrangements. At the low end, we suggest the phenomenon of Vibercrime, in which 'vibe coding' lowers the barrier to entry, but do not fundamentally reshape the economic structures of cybercrime. We…
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