 So welcome, this is Brian Rowe in Northwest Justice Project, putting this on as part of an LSE TAG grant. Today we're going to be talking about ShareLaw video, a website that was put together by Atlanta Legal Aid, and we've got two staff from Atlanta Legal Aid who have been doing incredible stuff on this, who are here to teach you about making videos very, very simply and easily. We've got a bunch of feedback from the community in working on this site, and one of the major focuses of today's webinar is going to be the help guides and how you can use these new QuickStart guides or QuickStart kits that we've put together in order to create videos. But before we jump into that new feature, I'd like to talk about some of the new changes to ShareLaw video. Number one, we've removed the login, so it's much easier for people to actually get to see view the content that is available. In order to download content also, you no longer need a login, but you do need to give us some information and agree to the terms and conditions here, which is basically that it's available under a license that allows nonprofit organizations to use each of the different pieces of content here in their education and outreach. We do collect a little bit of information, your name, your organization, and your email. This is pre-populated with my email here at Northwest Justice Project because I'm logged in, but you do not have to have an account to download, just have to be able to give us that information and then we'll be monitoring that to see who is creating videos and hopefully be able to outreach to the community and help individuals with videos. And then when videos are created, we also want to be able to promote and share those through the LS Untap blog or other places so that we can help people actually find these videos when they're done. We also have tried to upgrade the visual appearance of the site to make it easier to see what type of content is available. We are slowly but surely adding better functionality with regards to thumbnails so that you can get an idea of what the content is directly before downloading it, taking snippets or pieces of videos and showing that as part of the thumbnails that are there. We're still working on some ideas for slides and audio content of how we can come up with a thumbnail that lets people know what the audio content has in it. One of the really nice things about the site is we've got a strong search with a lot of different categories. If you are on someone else's legal services website, you find their YouTube channel and you see content that they've created, you can easily go through here and then search for content by the donating organization, the organization that has provided that content to us. For example, Northwest Justice Project has a significant number of videos that we have done and we put a lot of the source materials up there. As you can see, Illinois Legal Aid has donated a huge amount of content as has Atlanta here. We've also got a tag feature that will help you figure out or find particular common items in everything that is available and a lot of these come up with solid, useful thumbnails to it. There is a diversity of content here ranging from static images to short little video clips. This gavel here is just someone actually hitting a gavel that could be put into or sliced into a video somewhere. The search function on here is really good. If there are ideas or things that you think we could do better with this website, please feel free to contact me, contact LSNTAP, or just take the survey that we've got embedded here on the front page. Give us feedback about it. Our goal is to continually upgrade this site and try to improve how easy it is to use. The next section that is really important here is our help guides. There is a list here of how to upload media. You do need to create a content or create a login in order to upload content to the site. We are happy to help you with this process. The walk-through is pretty easy, but we're also willing to just take email submissions and upload it ourselves to the website and help you with that process. We're here to get as much content up here tagged with the highest quality tags as possible to make it easy for other people to find. We also create guides on how to use different pieces of software. A big part of this webinar today is going to be how to use free software in order to create your videos using the QuickStart kits that are right here. This is where I'm going to turn it over to Kirsten to talk some about those QuickStart kits and then walk you through creating a video using Windows Movie Maker. What I wanted to do is introduce the idea of the QuickStart kits. We've changed the name several times. We've called them packets for a while, QuickStart packets, QuickStart guides. The idea is when we created ShareLaw video, video content for statewide websites was kind of in its infancy in the legal services community, and we envisioned ShareLaw video as a place to share raw material so that organizations could have an easy way to create new video content specific for their organization or for their jurisdiction. Now that we have a nice body of high quality replicable video content, things are a lot easier or should be a lot easier. You can, if you want to, cut and paste, grab the gavel scene and grab the judge scene and make your own video with your own content for your own jurisdiction, but the QuickStart kits are designed to make it very easy, quick and simple to take the replicable video projects that other organizations have done and make it so that you can actually replicate it because I know on our statewide website I love, for example, some of Connecticut Law Helps how to get ready for court videos, but at the end of it, it sends you to CT Law Help, and it doesn't send you to GeorgiaLegalAid.org or doesn't send you to Atlanta Legal Aid. So it wasn't something that I could just grab and embed in my website. So the QuickStart kits are designed to give you absolutely everything you need to do that, to take a very carefully, thoughtfully designed, high quality video and replicate it, not reinvent the wheel, not redo the content. We've taken out all of the jurisdictional specific content and we've created placeholders so that you can put in your jurisdictional information. And so you're not recreating content. When you use a QuickStart kit, you're using content that somebody has already very carefully put together with an eye for it to be replicated by other jurisdictions. Where you find them on the site is you go to the Help Guides section and we've created a list of QuickStart kits. I sort of, when we got this idea, I surveyed the community and kind of tested out whether the idea was something people were interested in and people were. And they gave me sort of an indication of the topics they were interested in replicating and that includes landlord-tenant consumer housing and benefits. And we did our very best to find videos that hit those topics. It's also designed so that people with zero tech background can replicate these videos. We follow the instructions using free software and make a video for your statewide website to be used by the end of the day. I've sort of timed doing these videos and it takes me less than an hour to do. So it's really, we've sort of parted down to this simplest method. Thank you so much, Gab and Kristen. We greatly appreciate you coming out here and going over share a lot of video and how to replicate that video content with these QuickStart kits. You're very welcome. Looks like there's a question. Oh, excellent. We've got a question about the photos that are used. Are they licensed so that organizations can safely use them in videos? Yes. A lot of the photos are either created by individual organizations or they are from sources like Pixel Bay that are public domain, that type of stuff. So all of the images, all of the content, the organizations that are donating the content have set it up in a way so that other organizations can use it. Copyright is one of those things that we're definitely cognizant of in creating and that's one of the big reasons that ShareLaw video exists is to try to make it so that you can easily find content that has been licensed in a way that legal services non-profit organizations can use it. We encourage all of our donors to use a Creative Commons license that makes it really easy for other organizations to use it. In fact, all of the photos that I used in the PowerPoint that I was demonstrating with, with the exception of one photo, they all came from Microsoft Office Clipart. They've got a lot of great stuff in there. Yep, and Alice Ntap about two years ago wrote a full guide on copyright and it has a section in there about finding content that can be used specifically for video projects, blog posts, that type of stuff. And that guide is available on our website. You're seeing a picture of it currently here. It was co-authored by myself and Liz Lehman who was working out of Montana legal services at the time. Any other questions? If not, we're going to be closing out. Thank you so much for attending. Thank you.