That looks exactly like what I want to move towards, thanks Durf.
 
Joe Heaton
 

________________________________

From: Durf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, February 22, 2008 2:57 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Handling of confidential files


You want a "drop" folder:

http://technet2.microsoft.com/windowsserver/en/library/86987829-3f74-412
f-abb8-c8b22b07257d1033.mspx?mfr=true

-- Durf


On Fri, Feb 22, 2008 at 3:21 PM, Joe Heaton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


        I need some alternatives to a specific process.  The process in
question is timesheets.  Our timesheets are Excel spreadsheets, which
are processed as follows:
         
        1)  All timesheets are located in the user's home folder.  At
the end of the month, the user goes in, updates for the current month,
copies a .jpg of their signature onto the current month's sheet, and
forwards the timesheet to their manager via e-mail attachment.
        2)  The manager opens the timesheets for their employees,
verifies it, and copies a .jpg of their signature onto the current
month's sheet, and forwards the timesheets to a specific admin employee,
via e-mail attachments.
        3)  The admin employee takes the attachments, and copies them
into a folder on a server, from which the timesheets are then
"processed" and sent to another agency, to be further processed for
paycheck issuance.
         
         
        My question to my boss, is why can't we just have the managers
move the timesheets for their employees into the folder on the server,
instead of e-mailing them a second time.  In fact, we could have all
processing done within that folder to begin with, without having to
e-mail the files anywhere.  
         
        The issue that comes up, is how to prevent someone from another
department from opening someone else's timesheet.  The big concern there
is that the timesheets not only contain .jpgs of people's signatures,
but also contain SSNs.  
         
        My thought is to set permissions on the folder so that people
can place files there, but not be able to open them once they are there.
Is that possible with NTFS rights?  I will do research on it, but I'm
hoping that someone has already run into this type of issue and has an
answer already.
         
        Thanks,
         
        Joe Heaton
        AISA
        Employment Training Panel
        1100 J Street, 4th Floor
        Sacramento, CA  95814
        (916) 327-5276
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
         


        

        

        




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