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ThreatGPT Powers a New Era in Cybersecurity
How Agentic AI Threat Modeling is Reshaping Public Safety and Business Continuity

HR is lonely. It doesn’t have to be.
The best HR advice comes from people who’ve been in the trenches.
That’s what this newsletter delivers.
I Hate it Here is your insider’s guide to surviving and thriving in HR, from someone who’s been there. It’s not about theory or buzzwords — it’s about practical, real-world advice for navigating everything from tricky managers to messy policies.
Every newsletter is written by Hebba Youssef — a Chief People Officer who’s seen it all and is here to share what actually works (and what doesn’t). We’re talking real talk, real strategies, and real support — all with a side of humor to keep you sane.
Because HR shouldn’t feel like a thankless job. And you shouldn’t feel alone in it.

Interesting Tech Fact:
In the late 1980s, one of the earliest cybersecurity “tools” wasn’t software at all but a military-grade acoustic coupler scrambler used by intelligence agencies to secure phone-based computer connections. Unlike today’s AI-driven firewalls and intrusion detection systems, this tool physically masked modem signals by adding noise patterns, making intercepted transmissions nearly impossible to decode. Few outside classified circles knew of its existence, but it laid the groundwork for modern end-to-end encryption technologies by proving that data protection required both clever engineering and stealth.
Introduction
The hum of modern infrastructure is no longer powered solely by steel, electricity, and human oversight—it is increasingly guided by the invisible hand of artificial intelligence. This past week, a development shook the cybersecurity community with its ambition and clarity: