Well, AFAIK, “keep the data private” and “anyone with this link can view” are completely opposite things, and a page can’t be both at the same time. The latter means that the page is public; it’s just that the URL is difficult to guess, and so it’s highly unlikely someone who hasn’t been directly provided the link will discover it.

That’s also true for the Google Doc link you referenced as an example. That doc is not “private” at all. If someone with that link posts it to social media or otherwise broadly shares it, then anyone with that link can access the document.

If that’s what you’re after, then sure, it seems like you could just create a URL that would be difficult to guess. Bubble’s new Page Slug feature could come in handy for that. It might be as simple as generating a “hash” from a Thing’s unique ID to serve as the page slug.

If, instead, you’re after truly “private” data, then I think the only way to have direct control over who sees the resource is to require logging into an account on your app.

-Steve


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