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I have an issue within a corporate network that nobody internally seems to know the answer to so I thought I would ask here.
Having recently been upgraded to Office 365 we use Sharepoint. When uploading documents to the Sharepoint site it appears to save them in a newly created OneDrive folder.
Anyone with access to the SharePoint site will find a link to the document store within their personal OneDrive.
So my question is whether anyone knows if this is the default behaviour and if the files are actually being stored in OneDrive.
The reason I ask is that some documents for governance reasons cannot be stored on SharePoint or OneDrive but there does not appear to be any way of changing where files are stored.
Thanks for any insight.
The reason I ask is there does not appear to be any way with the updated office suite to
According to your description, the problem seems to be related to the syncing of files from SharePoint to OneDrive, you can try to stop the sync and see if the problem can be solved.
For detailed steps, please refer to:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/stop-syncing-a-library-with-the-onedrive-for-work-or-school-app-a7e41f1f-3a98-4ca7-9443-f10250688330
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I am not sure if this is really the problem but it seems that Windows 10 is automatically creating a new profile for me with the same credentials every time I restart my computer. I can still log on with my old credentials but some apps like Slack and Dropbox aren't there anymore and needs to be re-downloaded, MS Outlook is requiring me to set up my profile from start with nothing synced, etc. etc. It's treating me like a new user with each login. I am super frustrated.
Thanks.
There is not enough information for sure knowing what is happening. But from my previous experiences, I could assume that what you are seeing is, Windows login you into a temporary profile. This happens when there is something corrupted on your original profile, and windows log you into the last know working profile. After logout, nothing is saved.
Sometimes it is possible to recover the profile, but sometimes it could be impossible. Wherever is the case it is better backup anything that is possible in case that you need to delete and create a new one.
Google for windows temporary profile recovery as they are many techniques depending of the cause. Here are a couple of samples:
https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-security/you-have-been-logged-in-with-a-temporary-profile/20ed22a5-8338-4578-84bc-f0a8e77aa15d
https://winaero.com/blog/windows-10-youve-been-signed-in-with-a-temporary-profile/
I too have the same problem..This problem nos called Temporary Profile Login. You can just follow this YouTube Video Fix Temporary Profile Login Error in Windows 10
If you like reading go read this article FIX Temporary Profile on Windows 10
I hope I have answered this question.
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Closed 7 years ago.
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Since I am not that experienced with Linux this might be an easy, if not too simple question for you. Recently I met an old friend of mine and I want to exchange some files with him. In fact I could send the files by E-Mail or share them by Dropbox or something like that but I want to make use of Linux and my RaspberryPi.
Here, the RaspberryPi can be accessed via SSH and I want my friend to be able to access one specific directory. The one where I place the files.
I don't want him to mess around in the system. Ideally he should be able to only see this one directory.
Is it enough if I create a user and put the files in his home directory?
Thanks in advance
See this introduction to permission management on Linux.
To answer your Question:
Is it enough if I create a user and put the files in his home directory?
Yes, but it's not a perfect solution because the home folder of an user contains some subfolders.
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Closed 7 years ago.
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A newbie here, so please bear with me. I registered a domain with a big hosting company.
A few days ago, I noticed I started getting emails directly to my personal email with my full name. I started searching up my website and found a website who shows all my personal information. The exact full address where I live, my full name and my phone number.
Do personal information like that suddenly go all public when I register a domain, without my permission? A little bit worried if it's supposed to be like that, so I'm just asking.
When you register a domain, your contact information is published in the WHOIS service. You can use a WHOIS lookup tool and enter your domain name to see what the registration says. Anyone on the Internet can see the same thing.
Many domain registrars offer a privacy filtering service. They will obscure that information and put up their own name, address, etc. (Look up my domain, tangledhelix.com, for an example of what that might look like.) Some registrars will charge you for this, while others offer it for free or bundled with hosting or something else they sell.
Of course, it is too late to pull back the publication of the information now, but you can add a privacy shield service (if your registrar offers one) and stop the leakage from going further.
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Closed 8 years ago.
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I've seen others host images on Dropbox. Is there a way to find out the user hosting the file?
For example, if I post a Dropbox picture online, can any user find my name or username? Can link it to other uploads?
Thanks
Dropbox links are obfuscated, meaning there is no way to tell the directory structure by looking at the link. Also, contents on the same folder might have name close to one another but their shared link will be different. For example:
/Public/reports/doc1.txt -> www.dropbox.com/s/32nwq9a6y9q74hr/doc1.txt
/Public/reports/doc2.txt -> www.dropbox.com/s/wmveygkiea16sme/doc2.txt
So, there is no way to find link to other uploads (even in the same folder). Also, opening the shared link does not show any information about the host user. If viewer is logged in, it will show the viewer at the corner of the page.
However, the user might be exposed based on the metadata on the files that are uploaded. When user uploads a file, dropbox retains the metadata in that file. So, someone with the link can download the file (along with metadata) and find sensitive user information. For example, image files in these days contains information about the device, geolocation, time of modification etc. This does not give away the user account but can leak other information.
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Closed 8 years ago.
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I know google drive has a sync folder now and that most office documents placed within that folder will sync automatically with google drive. However, in order to edit, for example, an excel spreadsheet that has been synched to google drive, I have to convert it to a google doc. That means that any edits I make to the original excel file on my desktop will not sync with the newly created google doc. Is there any app or something that I can use that can sync changes made to an excel file on my desktop (I am using a Mac) to its google doc counterpart in google drive and vice versa?? I'd still like to do most of my edits using the Office software when possible...
Thanks!
As far as I'm aware, you can't.
You'll need to use a different cloud service, or don't convert them to Google docs if you want to use office software. Office software and Google cloud are competing products that do not have direct compatibility.