A BCC (blind carbon copy) is a copy of an email message sent to a recipient whose email address does not appear in the message.
This is in contrast to To and CC recipients, whose addresses do appear in the respective header lines. Every recipient of the message can see all the To and CC recipients, but does not know about BCC recipients.
BCC stands for Blind Carbon Copy. When you use CC you let all the e-mail receivers know who received a copy of the e-mail. When you use BCC, the members of the BCC group are not revealed to the other people who receive the e-mail. If you receive an e-mail that shows the only recipient as the sender, it probably means that your e-mail address was included on the BCC line.
Assuming you meant BCC not BBC - It stands for 'Blind Carbon Copy'. It's a method of sending the same email to more than one person - without each recipient knowing who else is getting it. Each person only sees their name on the email.
Blind carbon copy (BCC) to tertiary users who receive the message. The first and second users cannot see the tertiary users. Depending on e-mail software, the tertiary users may only see their own e-mail address in Bcc, or they may see the e-mail addresses of all users. One of the advantages of using BCC is that it cuts down on email headers. On some big email lists, the header can be longer than the email itself. If you use BCC then the header of all those in the TO and CC field can be minimized. One of the disadvantages of using BCC is that it can lead people to believe that you are being sneaky and sharing information with someone in order to under cut them in a political move.
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BCC
Put all the email addresses in BCC.
Hi Its not BBc in emails .Its BCc.It means Blind Carbon Copy. The receiver of the email does not know to who else you have sent the email if you put it in BCC. I think you mean Bcc which stands for Blind Carbon Copy. This is how Bcc is used: recipients listed in the Bcc: field will not be seen by any other addressees (those listed in the To: and Cc: fields).
BCC Lions was created in 1982.
BCC Research was created in 1971.
BCC stands for Blind Carbon Copy. It is used for sending the same e-mail to lots of people without anyone that receives it knowing who else got it. Clubs or organisations use it as a way of keeping people's e-mails private. Into BCC you put the addresses you want to send e-mails to, just like you would in the TO or CC line.
It means BCC. The people in the BCC list will also receive the email; however, the BCC list is concealed, so people you don't want to see the list can't.
There are 3 ways to send yourself a copy of an E-mail you are sending to someone else.Send To lineFirst, you can just include your own email address in the "Send To" line, along with the person's E-mail address to whom you are writing.CC lineSecond, instead, you can type the person's E-mail address in the "Send To" line and put your own address in the CC line. CC means "carbon copy". The term "carbon copy" refers back to how copies of personal letters were originally done; a person inserted a piece of carbon paper between 2 pages, and wrote the letter. The pressure of the pencil or pen imprinted on the flat side of the carbon paper, forcing the other side to create an exact duplicate of what had been written, at the time it was written. The person(s) who receives the E-mail will see the addresses in the Send To and in the CC lines.BCC lineThird, instead of using the "Send To" or the "CC" line for your own E-mail address, you can type the person's E-mail address in the "Send To" line and put your own address in the "BCC" line. "BCC" in E-mail stands for "Blind Carbon Copy" and it means that the person receiving the mail never sees any address that is in the "BCC" line. Using BCC is helpful if you do not want all the recipients to know who all you sent that E-mail to, or to secretively BCC another person when you want a 3rd party to know what you said. BCC is very, very helpful when sending to a list of more than 3 people. No one enjoys getting an E-mail that has 20 E-mail addresses listed at the top, showing all the names the E-mail was sent to including 'yours'. Long E-mail listings clog an E-mail, make it look untidy and immature, and can feel invasive to the receivers. Instead, use BCC to include everyone-- and put your own address in the Send To, the CC line, or the BCC line.ForwardingIf you forget to include your own address on an E-mail you already sent, you can open your Sent Mail box, then open the Mail you already sent. Then, click Forward. Enter your own address in the Send To line, and click send.Experiment with the ways described above. Type a message to yourself, like "Test" and try the different methods so you can see what each looks like when you receive them.