Thursday, 10 March 2016

10.3.16

I edited together a rough section of my film. I want dot make a cool looking intro that really summed up teens using social media and some of the dangers that they face on it. I got a lot of B roll clips, hacking clips, clips of abby and Tanay on social media and I found a royalty free song on youtube and edited it to the music. I think it turns out quite well. I also started editing the hacking section of the film. It looked pretty cool. I wanted to create a diagram that could be visually seen onscreen to demonstrate the 30% of teens that share their passwords with a friend. What I did was I got an image of a girl "sign" and a boy "sign" and I overlaid it onto the top of a screen video of someone asking someone else for their Facebook password. The problem was you cannot overlay more than one image so I had to keep saving the video, overlaying another image, saving again, overlaying another etc... It was a really tedious process. Once I finished with that the diagram looked like this:



I then took a screen grab of 7 of the people to represent the 70% of people that don't share their passwords:


What I then did was go back to the original B roll footage and paste two girls and one boy and then I saved this clip as they represented the 30% of people that do share their passwords with a friend and I needed them to remain onscreen. I then pulled up that clip and pasted the screen grab over the top aligning it with the message in the background and I put a transition on the screen grab so when the statistic of "30% of people share their Facebook password with a friend" was given I needed 7 of the people to fade away. This worked well and I was left with only three people. Two boys and one girl as girls are twice as likely to do this as boys. 





 I wanted to emphasise this statistic even more though, so what I did was on the original B roll footage I copied the girl image once again but larger. I saved this video then copied the boys image on but much smaller to represent that they are 50% less likely to share their password than girls. 



I also took a time-lapse video of me recently when I spent a lot of time on my laptop and i decided that if I overlaid that bit of footage with a screen grab I create the other day of a hacker typing in our hypothetical Facebook account while I shared some facts about hacking on Facebook it would look quite effective, as if I was hacking into the account or else you were witnessing a hacking taking place. 



I also overlaid a shot of Tanay typing away with a shot of messages being exchanged about friendship trust and the exchange of passwords to demonstrate that teens are far too trusting with each other and its not hard to share personal information.


I then overlaid a shot of a phone receiving multiple texts involving concern over a hacking with the time-lapse again to make it look like someone is hacking a Facebook and someones is reacting to the Facebook being hacked. Here i am talking about reputations being destroyed through hacking of Facebook so it relates to the idea of people wondering what you are posting on Facebook, which is the contents of the texts the phone is receiving 



I then wanted to shr the statistics of how many times Facebook accounts are hacked a day so I assembled many shots of Facebook accounts and some hacking techniques and edited them to music to enforce the idea of many Facebook accounts being hacked

I then overlaid a photo of Tanay over our hypothetical Facebook profile to make it look like she had logged into someones account, as the voice over expresses more statistics on how much Facebook is hacked a day. 

In the next section I talked about how many resources online are available to show you how to hack a Facebook I overlaid many shots of what came up when I searched how to hack a Facebook to demonstrate the large number of resources available. 


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