Carbon Copy BCC = Blind Carbon Copy
CC - Carbon Copy BCC - Blind Carbon Copy
These stand for 'Carbon Copy' and 'Blind Carbon Copy'. All email addresses in CC and BCC will be sent the email you have written. The difference is that addresses in the BCC list will not be able to see the addresses of anyone else you have sent the email to.
Look for the BCC ("Blind Carbon Copy") key in your outgoing email...
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.
Use the "bc" or "bcc" feature otherwise known as blind copy (you have the options of using "to", "cc" (carbon-copy), or bcc (blind copy or blind carbon copy) when sending emails. People will only see that the email was sent to "undisclosed recipients" if you use bc or bcc.
CC is carbon copy which is the exact same thing as the original email and BCC is blind carbon copy which means they cannot see the people it was sent to.
It is defined in RFC 733, written in 1977, and stands for Blind Carbon Copy which was used prior to the internet, with paper copy.
You can't see them.... the B in BCC stands for Blind.... the recipients are not able to see who else is receiving the message.
carbon copy, meaning sending the same thing to another person. cc = carbon copy bcc = blind carbon copy
Cc stands for carbon copy. It identifies a person who will receive a copy of the email AND whose name will be revealed to other receipients Bcc stands for blind carbon copy. The person will receive a copy of the email but their name will not be revealed to other receipients
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).