Engineers and designers often deal with massive CAD assemblies, rendering files, and simulation data that exceed the limits of traditional email attachments. is crucial to protecting intellectual property.

To guarantee your SolidWorks packages or project directories arrive intact and confidential, follow this defensive preparation checklist. 1. Compress and Archive Locally

Before uploading a SolidWorks assembly to any service, you should always:

Excellent for transferring smaller, sensitive documents via disappearing messages.

Always apply a strong, unique password to the download link, and communicate that password through a separate communication channel (e.g., via an encrypted text message rather than email).

Uses a custom protocol to maximize your bandwidth.

Utilizing or transferring unauthorized versions of enterprise software violates intellectual property laws. For businesses, this can trigger severe financial audits, data loss, and corporate liability.

I can guide you toward setting up a compliant, secure, and cost-effective data sharing workflow.

Highly secure, end-to-end encryption, based in Switzerland. No account required.

Even if the transfer tool is secure, add a secondary layer of encryption to the archive itself using a strong password.

To work safely and legally, utilize legitimate distribution channels or free alternative CAD platforms.