Is this necessary/better? I don’t think I can give some group members edit and others viewing rights? Can this be caused by how I organized things or not?ĭropbox chat suggests I use groups to grant access to folders. That is how I want it, but making it so seems to have messed with 1 Team member’s access both to Team folder as with a folder it owns itself.
Team members were denied access (because I do not want all of them to have access) and I invited a Team member and people outside Dropbox team, some with edit and some with viewing rights. You can create as many shared folders as you want within your account up to your quota. Admin made folders inside the Team Folder. It is intended for file sharing, yes, but its intended that you have 1 account and share everything from that 1 account. Some people should have edit rights, most should have viewing rights.Ĭurrent status: folders are owned by Admin. One way that MIGHT work, would be to contract out a sys admin who can setup network shares that are, behind the scenes, going to dropbox folders and limiting access to certain folders. We support files up to 15 GB in size for Dropbox to Microsoft 365 migrations. You'd need to go the business or enterprise route, getting multiple licensees. Prerequisites installed: Make sure you have the necessary prerequisites installed. Access to these folders upon invitation (but not through a link) by coworkers and people outside of de Dropbox Team. Access to the source: Have Dropbox account credentials that have read access to any Dropbox user account you plan to migrate. Multiple folders that are owned by Admin. We have a business Dropbox account with 4 team members. We are a small society with a board, secretariat and several committees.