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private sharing tweaks
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@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ sidebar_position: 0
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`zrok` was built to share and access digital resources. A `private` share allows a resource to be
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shared through a __privately__ available endpoint. Privately shared resources can only be accessed by another `zrok` user who has the details of your unique share.
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Sharing a resource with privately is one of the things that makes `zrok` unique.
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Peer-to-peer private resource sharing is one of the things that makes `zrok` unique.
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`zrok` also provides `public` sharing of resources with non-`zrok` users. Public resource sharing is limited to only resources that can be accessed over `HTTP` or `HTTPS`.
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@ -18,14 +18,14 @@ Here's how private sharing works:
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`private` shares are accessed using the `zrok access` command, and require the accessing user to have a working (and `enable`-d) `zrok` account on the same service instance where the share was created.
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The `private` share is identified by a _share token_, which uniquely identifies your share. The accessing user will use the share token, along with the `zrok access` command to create a local endpoint on their system, which let's them use the shared resource as if it were local to their system.
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The `private` share is identified by a _share token_, which uniquely identifies your share. The accessing user will use the share token, along with the `zrok access` command to create a local endpoint on their system, which lets them use the shared resource as if it were local to their system.
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`private` sharing does not require you to open any firewall ports or otherwise compromise the security of your local system; there is never an attack surface open to the public internet.
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`private` sharing does not require you to open any firewall ports or otherwise compromise the security of your local system; there is never an attack surface open to the public internet. As soon as you terminate the `zrok share` process, you immediately terminate any possible access to your shared resource.
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The shared resource can be a development web server to share with friends and colleagues or perhaps,
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it could be a webhook from a server running in the cloud which has `zrok` running and has been instructed
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to `access` the private resource. What matters is that the access to the shared resource __should not__
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be done in a public way, for more secure access.
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to `access` the private resource. `zrok` can also share files, websites, and low-level TCP and UDP network connections using the `tunnel` backend. What matters is that the access to the shared resource is not
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done in a public way, and can only be accessed by other `zrok` users that have access to your share token.
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The peer-to-peer capabilities of `zrok` are an important property of the underlying [OpenZiti](https://docs.openziti.io/docs/learn/introduction/) network that `zrok` uses to provide connectivity between users and resources.
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