- All users that are members of a Top level agency has access to all Containers within that agency's Country, with the rights given by the assigned role in user management.
- In a reconciliation context, the rules of file disclosure and agency-induced global rights applies, not the Container rolespecific container role from the Containers of participating files. The rules of file disclosure can be found here: Linking and Reconciliation (Flow & lingo). General The general rule is that if the two files are from the same agency, no file disclosure is needed.
Losing you're your global rights on activating a file from a Container
When you start the system, you can see your current role in the statusbar status bar at the bottom of the screen (available from version 5.1.0.3) :You will always be able to track you're your current role in the statusbarstatus bar.
Once you activate a file from a container where you're your rights are different from your agency-based global rights, these the rights of the current active file kick in globally. In this example an Administrator users rights are reduced to be Read Only:
The user can return to the "globalnormal" state by clicking on clicking
Warning title Assigning container roles to users You should not give a user access to administrative operations through a role in a container that she doesn't already have. Potentially this could be taken advantage of while the file is active.
E.g. If the user globally has a Read Only role through the agency and she is given Adm Admin rights in a specific Container, then while a file from that particular container is active, she has all the rights of an Administrator in the system and can mess with stuff she's not supposed to mess with.
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