 On behalf of Wikimedia Australia, I'm very pleased to announce the inaugural Craig Franklin Award. The award recognises a project or activities that have had a positive impact on the Wikimedia movement in Australia in the past year. And it honours Craig Franklin, a generous and prolific Wikipedian and founding member of Wikimedia Australia, who died in 2018. This award celebrates his achievements and his dedication to the free knowledge movement in Australia. He was a founding member of Wikimedia Australia and served as the President and Treasurer. He ran Wikimedia events in Brisbane and developed Wikimedia Australia's relationship with the State Library of Queensland that continues to be strong to this day. We're very grateful for his work as a passionate advocate for Wikimedia platforms. Through this award, we hope to honour Craig Franklin's work and the work that is currently being done across Australia in the Wikimedia community. So we would like to announce the winner of the inaugural Craig Franklin Award is Franklin Women. Franklin Women is Australia's only professional community dedicated to supporting the careers of women working across the health and medical research ecosystem. Their vision is for a health and medical research sector where women thrive. They've recognised the importance of Wikipedia in achieving the same and have held two workshops in 2019 and 2022 to increase the online representation of women working in health and medical research. As they say, learning how to edit Wikipedia is a wonderful and fun way to combat the gender bias and help make the internet a little bit better. The Franklin Women workshops have created 51 pages, added 1,000 reps and involved 60 new women editors, which is a really fantastic achievement. In the last year, Franklin Women also commissioned a series of high quality videos on how to edit Wikipedia featuring Catty Brain. The more than a day videos have been viewed over 2,000 times on YouTube, giving a simple guide for how to edit Wikipedia and getting more women editing or writing about, written about on Wikipedia. We would like to thank Franklin Women's founder, Dr. Melina George-Sarkis for the work Franklin Women have done to help introduce new editors to Wikipedia. On behalf of Wikimedia Australia, thank you Franklin Women for all your work and to Dr. Melina George-Sarkis for accepting this award on behalf of your organisation. Melina, I'm not sure if you would like to say anything. I'll just stop sharing my screen for a moment. Yes, Amanda. Thank you so much. Hi everyone. I'm here on behalf of Franklin Women with Dr. Sarah Frost, who is down in my corner. I'm joining on Camarago Land from North Sydney and I'm actually going to feel a little bit emotional about this honour. You know, Franklin Women has had a few opportunities to be recognised in our sector, but when we started our journey with Wikimedia probably three or four years ago, we were absolutely complete novices. I had, you know, please excuse my ignorance. I have now obviously evolved in my understanding, but I really took for granted how Wikipedia worked. And I think I represented a lot of women and individuals across our sector. And we were naive and we're like, oh yeah, we could contribute, we could do something. And I can honestly tell you those numbers of impact that you put on that slide, Amanda. There is no way we could have achieved any of that without the generosity of Wikimedia Australia. And the Wikimedians who are on this call in particular a big shout out to Bunty and anywhere are you and Pru with the workshops and Belinda from being so supportive like you really just welcomed us in and said whatever you needed to do to make this a success. So generous with your knowledge. It took us from zero to 100 and the fact that we had that support to be able to put our best foot forward so our community felt supported to be able to contribute to Wikipedia. I'm just so humbled by what you do and so grateful for this recognition and like it's motivating us to get ready to do it again next year so watch out when we send an email. But yeah, I'm just so grateful. And I also want to acknowledge Caddy. I'm not sure if Caddy's on the call. And also Sarah and the Franklin women team. I often commit us to do crazy things. And big shout out to Sarah who really made the magic happen and if I could just offer an opportunity to say anything if you want Sarah because you worked with so many on the call. Yeah, thanks Melina. Hi everyone. I think you've said everything beautifully. I'm not sure I have much to add other than just to really reiterate how welcoming the Wikimedians community has been and really given that we were complete novices and we took this on because we were so, you know, passionate about this idea of getting more representation and once we saw that those stats about the gender content bias and we really wanted to get involved, but it was only really possible because you all helped us as well. And yeah, and I guess just on a personal note, it's really been amazing to understand more about how Wikipedia works. I really, you know, now I don't take for granted the information I get from there. I am amazed to see everything on the top pages and all the sort of transparency around it. And, you know, now sometimes I'll Google a colleague and they'll pop up in that little call out box at the top of Google. And it's a Wikipedia profile that was never there. So that's really exciting to see that as well. So, yeah, thank you. Wonderful. Oh, thank you and thank you very much for coming along and just to point out that we only get a certain way by ourselves and it's actually with partnering like organizations with organizations like yourselves that get us access to your whole community that we wouldn't be able to do it so easily that, you know, we can make these kinds of achievements. So, yeah, what we're really keen to do more of.