1. To send an email to the second person without the first person knowing
2. Sending through a Mailing List or Newsletter
3. Protecting the second person by not sharing their email address to the first person
=^-^= I'm good at this stuff
Its not easy to make corrections on the copies
Advantages to using the BCC or blind carbon copy feature in sending emails as opposed to the CC or carbon copy would be that: A. When you are sending email to several people but you don't want the identities of everyone on your mailing list revealed. (put your own address in the "To:" line.) B. Privacy. Discreet items that you want to send to more than one recipient. C. The BCC is "blind" as in the receivers of the email cannot see who else is getting the email. (this is advantageous, for example if you want to "rat out" someone who is causing trouble at work! You could send a response to their derogatory email and a "BCC" to the boss!)
The modern words are:Three blind mice, three blind miceSee how they run. See how they run.They all ran after the farmer's wife,Who cut off their tails with a carving knife,Did you ever see such a sight in your life, As three blind mice?
The cat was the killer in Three blind mice
Three Blind Mice - album - was created in 1961.
3. There are three blind mice.
Three Blind Mice
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.
advantages= you get to have fun doing it :}
"Three blind mice, see how they run", which is a line from a children's song.
three
there is no animal with 6 eyes and cant see but...3 blind mice can see,2 + 2 + 2 = 6 and there blind so its three blind mice