HomeWinBuzzer NewsMicrosoft Teams and SharePoint Receive Files Restore Feature

Microsoft Teams and SharePoint Receive Files Restore Feature

Nearly a year after it arrived on OneDrive, Files Restore is available on Teams and SharePoint, allowing users to restore to a point within 30 days.

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Teams and SharePoint users are receiving a handy new feature. Microsoft has announced it is rolling out Files Restore to the two services. Using this tool, admins and customers can restore files to any point over a thirty-day period.

In a blog post to announce the new and SharePoint recovery tool, Microsoft described Files Restore as a self-service solution for recovering lost files. To find the feature, head to the gear settings icon and follow the path Restore this library > select a date range > select your files > click Restore.

Site owners and admins can restore from any point over the previous 30 days, allowing files to be restored to the library. Microsoft says the tool is added protection against malware attacks, file corruption, and accidental end-user deletion.

Furthermore, the company points out Restore also handles large file sets:

“If lots of your SharePoint or Teams files get deleted, overwritten, corrupted, or infected by malware, you can restore your entire document library to a previous time. Files Restore helps subscribers undo all the actions that occurred on both files and folders within the last 30 days.”

The new feature is available for SharePoint users through document libraries, allowing the protection of files across SharePoint, Teams, Yammer groups in Office 365, and Outlook.

OneDrive

Yes, this is the same technology Microsoft has been using in OneDrive for Business since last year. In fact, we are surprised it has taken the company this long to move the feature to Teams. SharePoint is the underpinning of OneDrive, so the tech was an easy switch.

The feature allows OneDrive users to easily restore their files from any point from the past 30 days. This is extremely helpful if you accidently delete a file, recover lost data, or head back to a safe point if you suspect an attack.

SourceMicrosoft
Luke Jones
Luke Jones
Luke has been writing about all things tech for more than five years. He is following Microsoft closely to bring you the latest news about Windows, Office, Azure, Skype, HoloLens and all the rest of their products.

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