Sharing with people outside the organization
To send a file, folder, or whole share to someone who doesn't have a ScaiDrive account, create an external link. The recipient gets a URL they can open in a browser — no sign-up, no account.
External links are public by default, but you have a lot of control over who can use them.
Creating a link#
In the web client:
- Right-click a file, folder, or share root → Create external link.
- Pick options (defaults are fine for most cases).
- Click Create.
- Copy the URL — that's all you send to the recipient.
Options#
Password. Enter a passphrase. The recipient has to type it on the link landing page before they can access content. Strongly recommended for anything not totally public.
Expiry date. Pick a date after which the link stops working. Useful for time-bound disclosures.
Download limit. Cap the number of downloads. After the cap, the link is dead. Good for one-off file deliveries.
Allowed emails. A list of email addresses; the link only works for browsers that prove they own one of those addresses (the user gets a code by email and enters it on the landing page). Combine with no-password for friction-free access for specific people.
IP allow-list. Restrict by source IP / CIDR. Combine with the rest for high-security distributions.
Permissions.
- View only — recipients can preview but not download (PDFs render in-browser, downloads are blocked).
- View and download — the default.
- Upload (drop zone) — recipients can only upload to a folder you specify; they can't see what's there. Perfect for receiving submissions.
Notify on access. Get an email each time the link is accessed.
Managing your links#
Click Links in the share sidebar (or My links in the top-right user menu) for a list of every link you've created:
- See click counts, last access timestamp, and remaining downloads.
- Revoke kills the link instantly — the URL stops working everywhere.
- Regenerate issues a fresh URL with the same options (useful if you suspect a leak).
- Extend expiry or reset download counter to keep a still-useful link alive.
What the recipient sees#
A clean landing page with your organization's branding and the file's name. If a password is required, they type it. If the link allows downloads, they get a download button. Optionally, they can preview the file in-browser.
Your name (the person who created the link) appears on the page so the recipient knows it's legit.
Tips#
- For routine sharing (NDAs, contracts, deliverables) put a password and a sensible expiry on every link. The audit log keeps a record either way, but a password makes accidental forwarding harmless.
- For submission folders (a client uploads documents to you), create an upload-only link and put it on a project page. You'll see the uploads in your share; the recipient never sees what's in there.
- If your organization has a corporate link policy (e.g., max expiry of 30 days), your administrator can enforce it across all links. You'll see the policy in the link creation dialog.
What's next#
- File versions — recover an earlier version of a shared file.
- Sharing with your team — invite internal members instead.