If you shared your draft's URL with someone and don't want them to be able to access it anymore, you can change the draft's permissions to control who among those who might have the link can successfully access the page. The person you shared with can themselves share the link with anyone they want, who can share the link with anyone, and so on. Keep in mind, though, that once you share the link with someone, the link is out there. ![]() If you share your draft's URL with someone, they'll be able to join you for some live collaborative editing! The only way someone can view your draft is if they have the URL to the draft, and the only way they'd have that is if you explicitly shared it with them. ![]() ![]() No one can view your draft when you first create it. By default, drafts aren't findable - they don't show up in page trees and won't show up in search results. This creates a draft – an unpublished page or blog post that you can get back to at any time by heading to Recent > Drafts from the navigation. This makes it easy to create a page and start scribbling and when you're ready to stop but not quite sure if you're going to do anything with it, you can just select Close in the editor without publishing. ![]() See Comment on pages and blog posts.Ĭonfluence autosaves as you go whenever you're using the editor. Once the page has been published, any unresolved comments can be seen by page viewers. Only those in your editing session can see, reply to, and resolve the comments. Inline comments can be added while editing a page.
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