Jun 12 2020 03:37 AM
I want to secure a wiki. I have changed the access privileges in SharePoint to Read Only for Team members but they are still able to edit the wiki. The weird thing is that if I open Sharepoint then the latest Modified Date and User is not in line with what happened on Teams. I am clearly missing something. Any ideas?
Jun 30 2020 12:19 PM
Hello @Illuminate I can't answer your question directly but I can offer you this article on Security in Teams in general - perhaps there's something there that will help. Otherwise we'll just have to see if the community members have other suggestions.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoftteams/security-compliance-overview
Jun 30 2020 12:46 PM
@Illuminate Hello! Never done it but you should be able to do it. Try this.
Open the SharePoint view.
It most likely is inheriting permissions. Stop that and set grant/edit desired permissions.
Jun 30 2020 10:16 PM
@ChristianBergstrom thanks, This is the first thing I tried and members are still able to change the Wiki. I asked the same question during Colab365 recently and the general consensus was securing a wiki goes against the principles of a wiki, sharing i.e. if you feel that you need to secure information in a wiki it is probably the wrong tool to use. While I agree with the sentiment I am a bit baffled by the fact that I can set access permission but it does not have any impact
Jun 30 2020 10:45 PM - last edited on Jul 01 2020 08:38 AM by ThereseSolimeno
Jun 30 2020 10:45 PM - last edited on Jul 01 2020 08:38 AM by ThereseSolimeno
Solution@Illuminate Hello! Thanks for the update, that's handy to know! (never tried it as I mentioned).
How about using OneNote within Teams instead? It's a much better overall experience comparing to the Wiki and you can secure it with password-protected sections (but not entire notebooks) using encryption. To add to that you have the sharing/permissions options as well.
Jun 30 2020 11:14 PM
Thanks @ChristianBergstrom I will look into that. I was also thinking about using Sharepoint site pages but OneNote would be easier to manage. I have never tried to secure OneNote in Teams and it would be interesting to see how it works since the Wiki is actually built on OneNote.
May 21 2021 05:04 AM
@Illuminate unfortunately you can't lock teams built-in wiki from being edited, but there is a lot of 3-rd party wiki apps available for the Ms Teams. Here is an overview of "Best Wiki Apps for Microsoft Teams in 2021"
Jun 30 2020 10:45 PM - last edited on Jul 01 2020 08:38 AM by ThereseSolimeno
Jun 30 2020 10:45 PM - last edited on Jul 01 2020 08:38 AM by ThereseSolimeno
Solution@Illuminate Hello! Thanks for the update, that's handy to know! (never tried it as I mentioned).
How about using OneNote within Teams instead? It's a much better overall experience comparing to the Wiki and you can secure it with password-protected sections (but not entire notebooks) using encryption. To add to that you have the sharing/permissions options as well.