In an email, the "To" label indicates the primary recipients who are intended to receive and respond to the message, while the "Cc" (carbon copy) label is used for recipients who should be kept informed but are not the main audience. Recipients in the "Cc" field can see who else received the email, fostering transparency. Using "Cc" appropriately ensures that relevant parties are included in the conversation without expecting them to take action.
"Show to Cc" labels typically refer to a feature in email clients that allows users to indicate whether recipients in the CC (carbon copy) field can see each other's email addresses. When enabled, all CC recipients can view the email addresses of others in the CC field, fostering transparency. Conversely, if not shown, recipients will not see the CC list, maintaining privacy among them. This feature is useful in various communication scenarios, depending on the desired level of confidentiality.
CC means Carbon Copy and it will send the same email to the person in the CC box. Anyone you send the email to can see this so if you want to make sure no one can see who you send the copy to then use BBC.
Carbon Copy.... if you type an email address in that line, that person will receive a copy of the email you are sending. BCC is Blind Carbon Copy meaning that if you type an address in the BCC line, that person will receive a copy of the email you are sending but their email address will not show to the others who received the email.
If you mean email it's carbon copy
dot-cc at the end of an email address means the domain name is registered through the grace of the Australian territory known as the Cocos Islands. Copy correspondence.
To remove the CC (carbon copy) recipients from your emails, simply open the email draft and locate the CC field. You can either delete the email addresses listed there or remove the entire CC field, depending on your email client. If you want to send the email without CC recipients, make sure to only include the primary recipient in the "To" field. Finally, save or send your email as needed.
To add a CC student to an email thread, simply include their email address in the CC field when composing the email. This allows the student to receive a copy of the email along with the primary recipient.
Cc means Carbon copy, and if an email address is entered into the Cc box a back up copy of the email will be sent to that person. Bcc means Blind Carbon copy, and if an email address is entered into the Bcc box a back up copy is sent to the person, but they don't see who else has received the email.
CC(Carbon Copy) is just another recipient to be sent a copy of the email. When you send an email with an email in the 'To' field and an email in the 'CC' field, the person in the 'To' field can see who was in the CC feild, although if you use BCC (Blind Carbon Copy), they can't.
cc=carbon copy bcc= blind carbon copy. use these when sending to multiple addresses
"CC" stands for "Carbon Copy." When you see "CC" in a signature block, it means that the email or letter is being sent to other people besides the main recipient. For example, if you send an email to your boss and "CC" your colleague, your colleague will also get a copy of the email.
CC means "Carbon Copy". The email was sent to multiple recipients or, if send a new email, can have multiple recievers by separating addresses with a comma and a space."cc" stands for Carbon Copy. It harkens back to the days when we used to write on one page but have it show on several other pages behind it thanks to a carbon sheet placed in between. In this case, you've written just one draft of an email, but 'copied' and sent to several other pages to several other people."cc" in email is used to specify a destination to which a copy of the email is to be sent. By common usage, it appears to differ from "to" in that the "cc" destinations are not the primary recipient(s) of the email.It's an abbreviation for "carbon copy", from back in the "old" paper days when a sheet of "carbon paper" was inserted between 2 sheets of paper to make a copy of the original when the original was written/typed/etc. on.