https://drive.google.com/file/d/FILE_ID/view
| Level | Who can access | Link appearance | |-------|----------------|------------------| | | Only people you explicitly add (by email) | Link is unique but only works for those users | | Anyone with the link | Anyone who has the URL, no sign‑in required | Most convenient but less secure | | Public | Anyone on the web (indexed by search engines) | Visible to search engines; use with caution |
need to interpret the user's request. They ask to "write a long article for the keyword" which is a URL: "https drivegooglecom file d 1xy8bpgzdxewx5wtnbtwxvj9mvynojl k view usp sharing". That looks like a broken Google Drive link (missing dots and slashes). Probably they mean the keyword is that URL string. But writing an article for a URL as keyword? That is odd. Perhaps they want an article about that specific file? But I can't access the file. Or they want an article that targets that long URL as a keyword for SEO? That doesn't make sense. https://drive
For most cases, is a good balance. Set the role to Viewer unless the recipient needs to comment or edit.
If a file is highly sought after—such as a leaked document, a free software patch, or a viral academic template—users will copy the URL and paste it directly into search engines to find alternative mirrors or discussions surrounding that specific file. This turns a random database ID into a high-volume search keyword. Understanding Google Drive Privacy Levels Probably they mean the keyword is that URL string
You can also add other parameters:
The link https://drive.google.com/file/d/1xy8bpgzdxewx5wtnbtwxvj9mvynojl_k/view?usp=sharing appears to be a shared file link from Google Drive. Let's break it down: Perhaps they want an article about that specific file
Once the file opens, you can:
.deep-text font-family: 'Arial Black', sans-serif; font-size: 120px; color: white; text-transform: uppercase;