You might see that the Dropbox Community team have been busy working on some major updates to the Community itself! So, here is some info on what’s changed, what’s staying the same and what you can expect from the Dropbox Community overall.
Forum Discussion
Co-laboration
4 years agoExplorer | Level 4
sharing files and folders with non team members
Greetings to all,
Using a business standard account, I would like to create different spaces to share files and folders with specific team members as well as non-members. Typically:
Top-l...
- 4 years ago
Thanks for getting back to us here Co-laboration.
If someone outside of the team shares a folder with a team member (the admin account in this case), then the folder is owner by someone outside of the team.
The shared team space outside of the purple folder can only hold folders that are owned by the team itself, this is why a folder shared to the admin account from outside the team appears in the personal folder.
This, however, doesn't meant they have access to the while purple folder. They can only see the content of the folder that is shared with you and nothing more than that (eg. the hierarchy within the folder).
If you want the folder with the non-team member to appear in the team shared workspace outside the purple folder, you can create a folder in the location you want it to be, and then share the folder to them to add the content.
This way, a team member is the owner of the folder so the data can be outside the purple folder.
Otherwise, you can ask them to transfer the ownership of the shared folder to the admin account, and then you can move the folder outside the purple folder.
I hope this helps clarify the matter, please let me know if you have any questions!
Lusil
Dropbox Staff
Hi there Co-laboration, thanks for posting your questions here. Let's get right to them!
If the user is asked to merge their account with the team, that means you've invited them to join the team itself.
Since only team members can access top level team folders, you'll have to create sub-folders and share those with users outside the team.
You can have a look at this article to see what happens when a user joins a team.
Also, if you are seeing that someone has a purple folder, then that means that they are a member of the team, and that is their personal team member folder.
Just to make sure that we're on the same page though, is the shared folder you're trying to move created by the member themselves, or was it shared with them?
Let me know and we'll take it from there. Thanks!
Co-laboration
4 years agoExplorer | Level 4
Thanks for your prompt reply -
"If the user is asked to merge their account with the team, that means you've invited them to join the team itself. "
The only invitation I sent was to share a specific file (GUI asks for email, name or group - I chose email with privileges 'Can Edit')
"Since only team members can access top level team folders, you'll have to create sub-folders and share those with users outside the team. "
I created a shared folder right under the root directory of the Team Dropbox, which I shared as per above
"Also, if you are seeing that someone has a purple folder, then that means that they are a member of the team, and that is their personal team member folder."
The purple folder was, in fact, the (personal) folder of the administrator - top level of the Team Dropbox. The invited non-member created (and is owner of) a folder which landed right under the purple folder of the administrator, of which he (the administrator) is the sole member (Members: Only You) - not sure how that happened, or what other resourced under this folder the non-member has access to (I would hope none)
- Lusil4 years agoDropbox Staff
If the user has a purple folder, it means that they are now part of the team.
Upon accepting the invitation to the team, they chose to merge their own account to it. The purple folder holds all their personal files and folders, nothing that belongs to the team.
They can still share their files and folders normally, by following these steps.
How would you like to continue from this point on?
- Co-laboration4 years agoExplorer | Level 4
There seems to be a misunderstanding: The (only) purple / personal folder I was refering to belongs to the administrator. It sits at the top level of the hierarchy and advertises no third party privileges (ie: only you)
The surprise is that folders created by non-members can even land in this folder; I would have assumed this space, just like any other private (purple) user folder, is not read/writable by anyone else than the owner (in this case the administrator). My questions with respect to this are:
1/ Since the non-member was allowed to create a folder under the private (purple) folder of the adminitrator, what else does the non-member have access to within this folder, either with read or read/write privileges? Can he for example view the hierarchy / other files folders which live side-by-side with the folder he just created?
2/ Is there a way to force non-members to create any new folders / files in a specific sharedspace?
- Daphne4 years agoDropbox Staff
Thanks for getting back to us here Co-laboration.
If someone outside of the team shares a folder with a team member (the admin account in this case), then the folder is owner by someone outside of the team.
The shared team space outside of the purple folder can only hold folders that are owned by the team itself, this is why a folder shared to the admin account from outside the team appears in the personal folder.
This, however, doesn't meant they have access to the while purple folder. They can only see the content of the folder that is shared with you and nothing more than that (eg. the hierarchy within the folder).
If you want the folder with the non-team member to appear in the team shared workspace outside the purple folder, you can create a folder in the location you want it to be, and then share the folder to them to add the content.
This way, a team member is the owner of the folder so the data can be outside the purple folder.
Otherwise, you can ask them to transfer the ownership of the shared folder to the admin account, and then you can move the folder outside the purple folder.
I hope this helps clarify the matter, please let me know if you have any questions!
About Delete, edit, and organize
Solve issues with deleting, editing, and organizing files and folders in your Dropbox account with support from the Dropbox Community.
Need more support
If you need more help you can view your support options (expected response time for an email or ticket is 24 hours), or contact us on X or Facebook.
For more info on available support options for your Dropbox plan, see this article.
If you found the answer to your question in this Community thread, please 'like' the post to say thanks and to let us know it was useful!