Infostealers, AI, and a 90% Affiliate Cut Fuel The Gentlemen group’s Rise


Infostealers, AI, and a 90% Affiliate Cut Fuel The Gentlemen group’s Rise

Pierluigi Paganini
June 15, 2026

The Gentlemen ransomware used infostealer credentials, AI tools, and affiliates to hit 483 victims across 66 countries in under a year.

The Gentlemen surfaced as a ransomware operation in September 2025 and by June 13, 2026 had listed 483 victims on their dark-web leak site, 380 of them in 2026 alone. That makes them the second most prolific ransomware brand of the year by published victim count, behind only Qilin. A May 2026 leak of the group’s internal chat logs handed researchers at KELA a rare look inside: nine core members, AI-assisted tooling, and an access model built almost entirely on credentials stolen by commodity infostealer malware.

The affiliate model is straightforward and aggressive. A small core team builds and maintains the ransomware and the negotiation panel. External operators carry out the actual intrusions and keep 90% of each ransom, which is a generous split even by current standards. The leaked chats, spanning November 7, 2025 to April 30, 2026, read less like a criminal conspiracy than a small product team arguing about infrastructure choices and which AI model to use for data analysis.

The victim distribution breaks from the typical ransomware pattern. Only about 15% of listed victims are in the United States, well below the 40-50% that US targets represent across most major leak sites.

“The rest are spread across Thailand, Brazil, the United Kingdom, France, India, Germany, Italy, Japan, Taiwan, and Spain. The leaked chats explain why: operators were told to prioritise what they called Tier 1 to 3 countries and Latin America, and to weigh operational pain over raw revenue, reasoning that a 20 million dollar utility can pay faster than a 200 million dollar manufacturer if the lock genuinely halts the business.” reads the report published by The RansomNews research team.

Manufacturing is the top targeted sector, followed by technology, business services, and healthcare with 44 listed victims.

Initial access is where the group concentrates its energy, not encryption. Operators scanned for and exploited internet-facing vulnerabilities including the FortiOS authentication-bypass flaw CVE-2024-55591, alongside older Active Directory weaknesses like ZeroLogon and PetitPotam. When no exploit was available, they used valid credentials stolen from compromised Outlook Web Access mailboxes, both to find VPN logins and to send phishing from trusted internal accounts that recipients had no reason to distrust.

The infostealer connection is the thread that ties the whole operation together. Ransomnews cross-referenced a sample of named Gentlemen victims against the alerts.bar infostealer index, which tracks credentials and session cookies exposed in stealer logs. Several victims had live corporate logins or active session tokens sitting in stealer data before they appeared on the leak site. One example, Philippine logistics firm 2GO, showed six employee logins, seven customer logins, and 38 active session tokens already exposed.

“That is the access pattern the leaked chats describe hunting for, observed in the wild against a real victim.” continues the report. “Stolen session cookies are why dark-web and infostealer monitoring now belongs in the same risk tier as patch management.”

Three things from the leaked chats deserve attention. First, the group studied the February 2025 Black Basta chat leak and treated it as a training manual, copying phishing and mailbox-abuse workflows rather than building their own from scratch. Second, the operation is openly AI-assisted.

“Administrator zeta88 said he ‘vibe-coded’ the negotiation panel in three days, and the crew discussed uncensored or ‘abliterated’ open-weight models, including a stripped-down Qwen variant, for coding and for reasoning over hundreds of gigabytes of stolen data.” continues the report.

This is one of the clearer documented cases of a ransomware crew actually using large language models in day-to-day operations rather than just talking about it.

Third, the extortion approach is willing to get personal. KELA observed operators testing pressure on a victim using sensitive medical content sent from a compromised personal mailbox. Microsoft has separately documented a self-propagating Go-based encryptor attributed to the group, but the real leverage increasingly comes from the stolen data and the victim’s own contact list, not the locked files. Encrypting your files is almost a courtesy at this point.

Nothing about defending against The Gentlemen requires exotic tools. Patch internet-facing devices fast, treat FortiOS CVE-2024-55591 and similar VPN flaws as emergencies rather than scheduled maintenance. When an infostealer infection touches corporate credentials, treat it as a breach and revoke sessions immediately. Move high-value access to hardware-backed or passkey authentication that doesn’t produce replayable session cookies, because stolen cookies defeat SMS and push-based MFA entirely. Harden Active Directory against ZeroLogon and PetitPotam, segment the network so one compromised host can’t reach everything, and keep offline tested backups while assuming data was stolen regardless of whether files were encrypted.

“The Gentlemen are a case study in how cheap it has become to scale a ransomware brand in 2026. They did not need a breakthrough encryptor.” concludes the report. “They needed a generous affiliate split, a steady feed of infostealer-sourced access, a rival’s leaked playbook, and a few open-weight models with the safety filters removed.”

The result is 483 victims across 66 countries in under a year, assembled by a team small enough to share one table. The leak that exposed all of this is also a reminder that these operations are fragile: one disgruntled insider or careless host can turn a crew’s entire workflow into a public document overnight, exactly as happened here.

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook and Mastodon

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, The Gentlemen ransomware)







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When Encanto was released, it was something of a cultural phenomenon. You couldn’t escape the song “We Don’t Talk About Bruno,” and the soundtrack went to the top of the charts. If you loved Encanto, there’s another overlooked Lin-Manuel Miranda animated musical on Netflix that’s better in many ways.

Vivo is another Lin-Manuel Miranda musical

He’s also the voice of the lead character

Vivo the kinkajou from the movie Vivo. Credit: Sony Pictures Animation

Vivo is a 2021 animated musical comedy from Sony Pictures Animation, the same studio behind smash-hit movies such as Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse and KPop Demon Hunters. Directed by Kirk DeMicco, who co-wrote it with Quiara Alegría Hudes, it features original songs written by Lin-Manuel Miranda, the musical genius who shot to superstardom on the back of Hamilton.

Miranda also plays the title character of Vivo, a kinkajou (a small, nocturnal mammal) whose days are spent earning money by playing music in the plaza with his aging owner, Andrés. When Andrés dies, Vivo makes it his mission to deliver a song that Andrés wrote to his old friend Marta Sandoval, a famous singer played by Gloria Estefan. The song reveals Andrés’ true feelings for Marta, but he could never bring himself to give it to her.

Vivo is helped on his quest by Gabi, a young misfit and the daughter of Andrés’ niece. The movie follows their journey through the Florida Everglades to reach Miami and deliver the song.

Why Vivo flew under the radar

The big theatrical release never happened

Gabi and Vivo on a raft in the movie Vivo. Credit: Sony Pictures Animation

Vivo is an animated musical from a major animation studio, with a cast of big names including Miranda, Gloria Estefan, and Zoe Saldaña. It features music from one of the most in-demand songwriters in the world, who also stars in it. Why isn’t it more well-known?

Perhaps the biggest reason is that Vivo never got its expected theatrical release. After the global pandemic disrupted Sony’s plans for a wide theatrical release, the rights were sold to Netflix. Instead of a major theatrical run, it joined the huge catalog of Netflix, where shows and movies all too often get buried by the churn of new content.

It meant that, unlike Encanto, Vivo never really got the chance to enter the zeitgeist or become a TikTok staple. Its fairly quiet release on a streaming service meant that it never got the attention that it deserved.

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Vivo’s music hits different

Gloria Estefan still has it

When Encanto came out, people raved about the music. The song “We Don’t Talk About Bruno” went viral, with an endless stream of TikTok videos. To my mind, however, the music in Vivo is just so much better.

I never really got the hype about “We Don’t Talk About Bruno.” It’s not bad, but it’s not even the best song in Encanto. While the music in Encanto is good, none of the songs really stand out as being classics. I listen to a lot of Disney movie soundtracks with my kids, and Encanto very rarely makes the playlist, while Moana, which also includes songs written by Lin-Manuel Miranda, gets played far more often.​​​​​​​


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What gets played a lot is the Vivo soundtrack because it’s genuinely brilliant. There’s something for everyone, too; there are four of us in the family, and each of us has a different favorite song from the soundtrack. That’s how good it is.

“One of a Kind” is the song that introduces us to Vivo and Andrés, and it’s a great mix of classic Cuban mambo and clave rhythms combined with Lin-Manuel Miranda’s trademark hip-hop flow. “My Own Drum” is an absolute banger sung by Gabi featuring possibly the greatest recorder solo of all time. My personal favorite, “Keep The Beat,” is a gorgeous song about keeping going when things start to change.

The most beautiful song in the movie is “Inside Your Heart,” performed by the legendary Gloria Estefan. This is the song that Andrés wrote for Marta, expressing his feelings for her. It’s a stunning song, and Estefan’s voice still sounds incredible. For me, it lands far harder than anything in Encanto.

What Vivo offers that Encanto doesn’t

There’s more than just the awesome music

2D animation of a young Andres and Marta dancing from the movie Vivo. Credit: Sony Pictures Animation

While both movies have music written by Lin-Manuel Miranda, only one of them features the songwriter in the main cast. Some of the fast-paced rhymes in Vivo are so distinctive that you can’t imagine anyone else doing them justice, as Dwayne Johnson proved in Moana.

Vivo also has a more dynamic story, with the action involving a race from Cuba to Miami rather than being set entirely within one location like Encanto. It also includes some interesting stylized 2D sequences that mix up the look of the movie. The emotional stakes are also much higher in Vivo, with a story that touches on death, regret, lost love, and finding your place in the world.

That’s not to say it’s a perfect movie. The plot does dip a little in the middle, but the stunning music and bittersweet ending make up for the flaws.


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Check out Vivo if you haven’t already

If you loved Encanto and you haven’t watched Vivo, you should definitely check it out. It’s a movie that really deserves more attention than it gets. I guarantee it will be the best kinkajou-based animated musical you’ll ever see.



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