If the layer is not public, anonymous users cannot access it. This setting is only applicable if the layer is shared with everyone (public). For example, if you have people collecting survey information from the public using apps such as ArcGIS Survey123, you may not want the editor to see the information the survey respondents provide, as it could be private or sensitive information such as the respondent's home address. Enable this option when the editor doesn't need to or shouldn't see newly added features. If you don't want editors to see any features, including those they add, choose Editors can't see any features, even those they add under the What features can editors see? setting.Enable this option if the layer contains sensitive or proprietary information such as medical records or research data for which editors may only have clearance to work with the data they collect. If you want editors to only see the features they create, select Editors can only see their own features (requires tracking) under the What features can editors see? setting.These are useful if your hosted feature layer or feature layer view is going to be used in crowdsourced apps in which you want to limit what contributors see or what control each contributor has over the data. If you configured the hosted feature layer to track who creates and edits data, you can choose to apply the following additional restrictions to the hosted feature layer or its dependent feature layer views.
#CANT INSTALL WORKFLOW MANAGER ARCGIS UPDATE#
If your hosted feature layer contains multiple layers, follow these steps to allow editors to update feature geometry and attributes on some layers and update only attributes on others: To allow editors to update attributes only and not update feature geometry-in other words, you don't want them to move features-choose Attributes only. Choose Update to allow editors to update feature geometry and attributes.