Informative speech

Informative speech "Cybersecurity" + "Cyberattacks" + "AI use" SOURCES: 1. The Expert BookCitation: Hadnagy, C. (2018). Social Engineering: The Science of Human Hacking. John Wiley & Sons.Where it appears in your script: Body Paragraph 1 (The Psychology). Why it is credible: Written by the industry's leading authority on human hacking, this foundational text breaks down the exact behavioral triggers (like urgency and authority) that manipulate human choices. 2. Academic Journal Article #1 (Database / Google Scholar) Citation: Salahdine, F., & Kaabouch, N. (2019). Social engineering attacks: A survey. Future Internet, 11(4), 89-105.Where it appears in your script: Body Paragraph 2 (The Evolution). Why it is credible: This is a peer-reviewed, comprehensive research study that maps out the evolutionary lifecycles of modern spear-phishing and information-gathering techniques. 3. Academic Journal Article #2 (Database / Google Scholar) Citation: Aldawood, H., & Skinner, G. (2019). Reviewing cyber security social engineering training and awareness programs. Journal of Information Security and Applications, 48, 102-114.Where it appears in your script: Body Paragraph 3 (The Defense). Why it is credible: This peer-reviewed behavioral journal article analyzes data on corporate training methodologies, proving why passive videos fail and why simulated phishing tests are mandatory to change habits. 4. The Single Credible Website (Max 1 Allowed) Citation: Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). (2024). Avoiding Social Engineering and Phishing Attacks. U.S. Department of Homeland Security.Where it appears in your script: Body Paragraph 2 (The Evolution). Why it is credible: As a premier federal cyber defense agency (.gov domain), its official threat briefs regarding AI voice cloning and deepfakes carry absolute authority for academic speech.