Like structures, views can be shared with different levels of access for each group of users.
There are four levels of access to a view:
None
The view is not visible nor usable by the user.
Use
Read-only access: the user can use the view, but cannot modify it.
Update
The user can use the view, and also save view adjustments as the new version of the view. The user cannot modify view name or sharing permissions.
Manage
The user can change any of the view's properties and also can delete it.
View owner and Jira administrators always have Manage access to a view.
People who have only Use permission for a view still canadd, remove or rearrange columns, but they can't save the modified configuration as a new version of the view. They can use the Save As link to create a new view with the modified configuration.
Changing permissions
If you have Manage access to a view, you can modify its permissions on the Sharing tab of the view details dialog.
For each level of access, you can define categories of users who have this type of access:
Nobody
Specific user groups
Specific roles in specific projects
Everyone (including anonymous users)
Higher-level access implies all lower-level access. So everyone who can Manage a view, can also Update and Use it - there is no need to add those users at all three levels!
Private and Public Views
When a view is not shared with anyone, it's called a private view. You can quickly make a view private by clicking the Make Private link – this will remove all permission assignments.
When everyone is given at least Use permission for a view, it is called a public view. You can quickly make a view public by clicking the Make Public link on the the Sharing tab and also in the Views menu – this will give Use permission for that view to everyone.
You need to have global Create Shared Objects permission to be able to share views.