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.
No.
If an email is sent to a user using 'BCC' that user can see the addresses of other recipients who were not sent as 'BCC'. However, none of those that received the email can see any of the 'BCC' recipients, and thus cannot respond to them.
BCC is the same as CC, except that the BCC field isn't public. An email sent to you via BCC will look as if it was sent normally and magically ended up in your inbox. This is handy for mailing lists, as you could send an email to yourself or nobody and have all of the recipients in the BCC field, protecting their privacy.
I believe you mean BCC, it stands for Blind Carbon Copy. When the recipients are in the BCC field, they can't see the other recipients.Addendum:The above is pretty close to being correct. CC (and the CC of BCC) actually stands for the plural "copies," just as the doubled letter "pp" in a source reference stands for "pages." Also, it is the BCC recipients whose names are not seen by anyone else; the CC recipients can be seen.
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.
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.
BCC typically stands for blind carbon copy, a term commonly used in email communication to indicate recipients who receive a copy of the message without the knowledge of other recipients. In the context of psychology, BCC could have a different meaning depending on the specific context within the field.
BCC means blind courtesy copy the main recipient will not see the other email addresses.
The full form of BCC in history stands for Blind Carbon Copy. It is a term used in email communication to send a copy of an email to recipients without the other recipients knowing. This feature helps maintain confidentiality and privacy in email correspondence.
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.
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.