yes
cc stands for carbon copy...it is used when you want someone else or other people to receive the email because it may be pertinent to them but they are not the direct main recipients of it.
Carbon Copy. If you put an e-mail address in that line that person will get a copy of the e-mail. BCC is Blind Carbon Copy, if you put someone's e-mail in that line, they will receive a copy of the e-mail but their address will be hidden by other recipients of the e-mail.
Hi all,This is what I know about Cc and Bcc in an e-mail communication:Cc (Carbon Copy ) - makes difference between your main(s) recipients(s) and the and an other one who needs a copy (may need to be informed) of that e-mail but he is not required to participate or respond.Bcc (Blind Carbon Copy) - is reserved for the recipient who should not see the others contacts.Please correct if I'm wrong,Cheers,RV.
Receivers - pre computer/email, CC was the acronym for "carbon copy". This was the second copy of an original letter, sent to another person(s) for information purposes (produced by putting carbon paper between the letterhead (top copy) and the carbon copy). In the arena of computing, CC is still used to send a "copy" of the email to other persons who are not usually expected to act upon it's contents, it is merely to advise them that the email has been sent to the main recipient. The BCC (Blind Carbon Copy) section is for the same reason but, whereas the CC is visible to all recipients the bcc is invisible to everyone.
It means 'carbon copy' - the person you 'cc' will get an exact copy of whatever you send to the main recipient-hope that helps!
Someone you include in the CC (carbon copy) will get a full version of the message, but they are not the intended audience, and all other people will be able to see them. A BCC (blind carbon copy) is similar except that no one will know that they get the message.
"CC" stands for "carbon copy" - the term relates back to the days of mechanical typewriters. When you wrote someone a letter using one of these you could make simultaneous copies of the types letter by inserting sheets of one side carbon paper and other white paper pages behind the top copy. There were called "carbon copies". Once carbon copy was always files and others were used to send to other people who needed to know what you had written to the main recipient of the letter. This "CC" concept has been carried forward to e-mail - if you get an email with you in the "CC" list, the letter is not directed at you but you are being notified for you information. More useful is the "BCC" (Blind Carbon Copy) field which allows you to den a copy to other people (like the "CC" field), but without sharing the email list you sent to with all the recipients.
In business letters the recipients of copies are listed under the main recipient and indicated by cc: (as in an e-mail)
BCC means blind courtesy copy the main recipient will not see the other email addresses.
CC stands for courtesy copy used for addressees that are not intended as primary ones and BCC for blind courtesy copy for hidden addressees.
CC refers to carbon copies - from the days when letters were typed out using manual typewriters and copies were made, while typing, using carbon papers. So CC refers to people, other than the main addressees, who will also get a copy. BCC refers to "Blind CC". These are people who will receive copies but their names will not appear in the list of recipients so nobody else will know that they have been copied in.
A credit card imprinter is capable of taking a carbon copy image of a credit card. Its main use is in situations where the magnetic strip is not recognized.