We are using Confluence here, campus-wide -- not just for the libraries. The campus installation has over 200 spaces (projects), some of which are public, some private. You can also have private pages within a public space, and vice versa. You can change permissions on any page, and pages inherit permissions by hierarchy, so it is pretty easy to set up a private section of a public space, etc. However, there were some issues I encountered a while back, when trying to move a private page into the public part of the page hierarchy: it was telling me that the page had no restrictions, but apparently no one else could see it. This problem may have been fixed in our recent upgrade, although I've just gotten used to the workaround we found (adding another restriction and then removing it). Keith On Thu, Jun 9, 2011 at 10:21 PM, Cary Gordon <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > FWIW, we prefer Confluence for documentation-centric intranets.