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Participating Frequently
May 11, 2012
Question

Creative Cloud sharing options.

  • May 11, 2012
  • 3 replies
  • 4345 views

I am more than a little disappointed in the sharing options on Creative Cloud. Seeing as how this is a professional service, at a professional price, I expected more options than just Private and Public. I have a fair amount of work that I would like to share with clients and collaborators, but don't want to, and sometimes can't legally, put that up on the web publicly, especially in a form where anyone can right click on it, and save it as an image to their HDD. I can't be the only one with these concerns, can I? I had assumed from the beginning, that there would have to be features to allow access to only certain users, even if they had to be Creative Cloud users to take advantage of this, otherwise, how is it any different than just throwing it up on any old website? Even Google Drive or Dropbox offer me better sharing features as it stands right now.

Are there future plans to make the sharing more targeted to professionals?

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3 replies

Oleksandr_Perelotov
Participant
April 6, 2015

+1 to this request. The idea of sharing files through Creative Cloud is exciting, but it is completely unusable without password protection.

craigget1
Participant
May 11, 2012

You are not the only one with these concerns. When collaborating on a file or folder we should at least have the option of password protect either or the folder/file. For my work without more security Creative Cloud is a no go.

David__B
Adobe Employee
Adobe Employee
May 11, 2012

Hi Imlloyd,

I'm sorry to hear it wasn't what you expected. Options and features will improve and change over time. What specific security features would you like to see incorporated?

-Dave

lmlloydAuthor
Participating Frequently
May 11, 2012

I can see two different ways to incorporate security.

What I had actually assumed would be the case, before actually using the Creative Cloud sharing, was that you would have the option of either publicly sharing the file, or keep it private, but be able to invite other Creative Cloud users to view, comment, or download the file, based on their Adobe ID, or alternately send them a link, that would then invite them to setup a free Creative Cloud account, and then let them view, comment, or download the content, as per the permissions you had set.

The other, simpler, way to do it, as craigget1 suggests, is to just be able to set a password on the share, so that only people with the password can access it.

Whatever the case, right click to download the image has to be disabled. I like to think that I have a good relationship with my clients, but I definitely have had some unscrupulous clients over the years, who given the option, would happily right click on an unwatermarked comp, and throw it straight up on their site, and then argue about paying for it, since they already had the deliverable, as far as the were concerned. I know that there will never be a way to truely stop a determined person from snagging content from a website, but letting them just right click and download a decent rendering of your file, is just asking to be abused. Most clients aren't going to go as far as making a screen capture, and then trimming the excess off, but just letting them right click, is just begging for it. It has been one day of trying it out, and I already had one guy I'm working with, send me back a logo I'm working on for him, with his own changes he made in MS Paint, after he right clicked and saved the image. That isn't really how I want to work with people.

As a side note, there seem to also be some problems with the commenting system in the Creative Cloud sharing. I had three collaborators who commented on a file I put up, only one of the comments actually showed up, and none of them could see the comments they made after they submitted it, nor could anyone see any comments but mine.

Adobe Employee
May 15, 2012

In that context, do you require your source copyright (and other) metadata to go with the file and its renditions in case download is enabled, or a file leaves the system in general?

Frank Biederich

Adobe Systems