You can't. By doing that, you're technically hacking someone's account, because you're deleting their mail, even though it was you that sent it. If you accidentally e-mail something wrong, there's nothing you can do about it (except for hacking the recipient's e-mail).
You can't ! Once the message has been sent - the only person who can delete it - is the recipient (or someone who knows their password) ! It doesn't matter whether the message has been opened or not - you don't have the authority to delete it !
They are called the intended recipient or the addressee.
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.
It means carbon copy !!It is used to send another message...
Carbon Copy - used to add more recipients to an email and a list of all the recipients is mailed with the message to each recipient.
When you send a message on Facebook, your message is private between you and the recipients. It will not appear on the recipient's wall.
If this error appears when scanning to a mailbox, it may indicate indicate that the mail server or the recipient is rejecting the message because it exceeds the maximum message size.
More than likely, an NDR 5.2.1 or 5.2.3 message will get bounced back to the sender as soon as the receiving mail server indicates the mailbox is full. If the end user frees up space before the receiving mail server reports the mailbox to be full, the message may still get delivered. I think this is one of the rare occasions where the message won't "sit in the queue" in a delayed status etc.... If the mb is full, I think the NDR is sent back immediately. SMB
1. Who the message it to. 2. Who the message is from. 3. The message itself.
Blind carbon copy is a concept that allows you to send a mass mail but recipients will not see each other´s addresses.But you have to have at least one recipient in "to:" field so everybody will see this recipient of the message, but it can also by you.
Blind carbon copy is a concept that allows you to send a mass mail but recipients will not see each other´s addresses.But you have to have at least one recipient in "to:" field so everybody will see this recipient of the message, but it can also by you.
You have to look on youtube to see how cuz youtube tells ya everything!sweetie,i want to give you my email!its rykhalaf@hotmail.com!add me on your list!
In the context of correspondence, blind carbon copy(abbreviated Bcc:) refers to the practice of sending a message to multiple recipients in such a way that conceals individual email addresses (mentioned in "to" field of the mail) from the complete list of recipients. In some circumstances, the typist must ensure that multiple recipients of such a document not see the names of other recipients. To achieve this, the typist can:Add the names in a second step to each copy, without carbon paperSet the ribbon not to strike the paper, which leaves names off the top copy (but may leave letter impressions on the paper)To specify recipients, an e-mail message may contain addresses in any of these three fields:To: Primary recipientsCc: Carbon copy to secondary recipients-other interested partiesBcc: Blind carbon copy to tertiary recipients who receive the message without anyone else (including the To, Cc, and Bcc recipients) seeing who the tertiary recipients are.It is common practice to use the Bcc: field when addressing a very long list of recipients, or a list of recipients that should not (necessarily) know each other.