Skip to main content

Private vs. Team Workspaces

Where your experiments live by default, and how you get access to a shared team.


Private by Default

When you sign in to SDLabs, you start in your private workspace. Everything you create here — experiments, datasets, projects — is visible only to you. No colleague can see it, comment on it, or run it.

Your private workspace is a good place to:

  • Try out a new experiment design before sharing it.

  • Explore a dataset without affecting your team's projects.

  • Work on something that isn't ready for review yet.

You will know you are in your private workspace because the workspace switcher shows a lock icon next to Private.


Team Workspaces Are Opt-In

A team workspace is a shared space where everything created inside it is visible to every member of that team. Teams are how groups of colleagues collaborate on the same experiments, datasets, and projects.

You only get access to a team if your organisation admin assigns you to it. Until that happens, you will only see your private workspace. If you believe you should be on a team but cannot see it, contact your organisation admin or the Atinary team.


At a Glance

Private workspace

Team workspace

Who can see it

Only you

Every member of the team

Best for

Drafts, exploration, work-in-progress

Shared projects, group experiments, joint analysis

How you get one

Automatic — every user has one

Assigned by your organisation admin

Indicator

Lock icon next to Private

Team name and avatar

Roles

Not applicable — only you have access

Each member has a role (Team Admin, Member, or Read Only)


Common Questions

Can my colleagues see what I do in my private workspace?

No. Private means private — not even other members of your team can see content there.

If I am on multiple teams, do they share data?

No. Each team is isolated. Switching between teams changes which experiments and datasets you see, but does not move anything between them.

How do I move something from Private to a team?


Did this answer your question?