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Our latest Grid user post is from Wes Preston. View original post (may link to a third-party site)
The short story:
Beware of using the ‘Share Site’ or ‘Share this site’ links in Office 365 – SharePoint Online without knowing exactly what it is doing: you are potentially granting users access to more content than you intend to.
The longer explanation:
In my opinion, security is one of the most confusing things in SharePoint for users to manage. This is both because the flexibility of its design leads to a confusing implementation and because most users aren’t properly trained on how SharePoint security works (yes, this should be handled through a governance policy).
Because of this, a number of issues usually arise: users don’t have enough access or users have too much access. Just this weekend I was chatting with someone that uses SharePoint in their organization and she described a conversation with their SharePoint contact who was giving her access to a site – or so she thought. Typical, irritating to users and something that needs to be handled better in order to successfully accomplish user adoption.
The flip side of that problem is giving users too much access – more access than you are intending them to have. Sometimes this isn’t that big of a deal, but many times it can be a serious issue with competing clients seeing each other’s content, etc. There are many examples of how this could turn out badly.
Well, in SharePoint Online, as part of Office 365, Microsoft has added a nice and easy way to grant users access to SharePoint by way of the ‘Share this site’ link. Unfortunately, while this is a very easy way to grant users access, it will in many cases grant too much access unintentionally – not because it doesn’t work properly, but because it isn’t doing what most users will expect it to do.
First, a quick primer on SharePoint security:
There are lots of details to work through if you want to dig in, but those are the basics. Now to the specific problem scenario.
I have a SharePoint Online site collection and I want to create an area where I can collaborate with people outside my organization on a project. To me, this translates into a sub site (or even better a site collection if possible) because I can isolate security at a whole site level, I can have a landing page for users, I can add additional lists later without having to change security, etc. So, I create my sub site.
By default, my site has a document library which is all I really need for starters. Now, I want to grant my external users access to the site – here comes the potential issue. SharePoint Online has the ‘Share this site’ link right on the default page. You can get to the same functionality by going through the Site Actions menu and selecting ‘Share Site’. Both are shown below.
Either of these links will open up the following form:
Herein lies the potential for a security issue. Now, the form does some nice things. It allows you to add users to groups and then send them an email that will alert the user to the fact that they now have access and provides them a link to the site, list, etc. that you’ve just given them access to. Where this form causes issues is by only allowing you to add them to the pre-existing ‘Visitors’ or ‘Members’ SharePoint security groups. By adding users to the ‘Visitors’ or ‘Members’ groups, you are very likely granting them access to more than just the sub site.
The Members and Visitors groups are default groups added to most SharePoint sites and many site administrators allow the groups to be inherited in sub sites and lists as they are created. Members are generally able to read most everything and contribute to most lists and content. Visitors can read, but not contribute. If I were to add my external users that I want to collaborate with on one specific sub site to either of these groups, they’d have access to much of the rest of my site as well unless I had specifically gone and locked down my other content by breaking inheritance and/or removing the Member and Visitor groups from my other sites and content – which most administrators or users do not do.
Suggested Approach:
The suggested approach to granting users access to only the sub site (or list) is to do it directly/explicitly rather than using the shortcut.
SharePoint security and permissions have many options. Be aware of what you are doing when adding users, groups and managing their permissions in order to maintain the security you need and want.
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1 out of 1 people found this post helpful.
Nice piece. Thanks for the details and screenshots.
Thanks!
Greeat explanation.
My theory was that I had to break the inheritance from the top site, but it should not be like that.. inheritance should only work downwards.
:)
There are many Intranets solutions on the market, however if you are looking for a solid SharePoint based Intranet solution, check out SharePoint Implementeds’ product. I think it’s the best solution out for the price. They seem to have put a lot of thought into usability and filling in gaps that you would not know exsist in sharepoint until you start your implementation.
They offer a turnkey solution which provides a custom Home Site, Department Sites and Project Sites, installation, configuration and training all under $10,000 with source code.
One thing that I would love to see that they dont have now is a hosted solution
You can get more details at sharepointimplemented.com/AwesomeIntranetGorilla.html
Everything must have a beginning.