“Bcc” in an email means blind carbon copy. Bcc'ing someone on an email sends them a copy of the email but conceals their email address from all other recipients. It also removes the reply-all feature.
Although a BCC'd recipient can see the direct recipient, they can't tell who else was BCC'd in the email. However, while your BCC recipient can't tell who else has been added, they will know that they were BCC'd in the email.
The privacy of email addresses is protected in the original message. Recipients will receive the message, but won't be able to see the addresses listed in the BCC field. When an email is forwarded, the addresses of everyone in the To and CC fields are also forwarded along with the message.
If you're the recipient of a message, you can't see whether the sender added Bcc recipients. Only the sender of a message can see the names of Bcc recipients by opening a message in the Sent Items folder where all sent messages are stored by default.
If you attached everyone via BCC, no one in your email chain knows who else got your message, and none of the recipients can reply to anyone else. This is especially good for emails you send to everyone in your address book, like if you send out a mass new phone number email, or something like that.
When you move someone to BCC, do they get replies?
Here's the quirk of email that makes “moving you to BCC” such a mercy: When someone replies-all to a conversation that contains both CCed and BCCed parties, the CCed folks will receive the reply … while the BCCed parties won't.
Typically, people use BCC for mass emails that don't require a response and to hide the email addresses of recipients to protect their privacy. However, some people may use BCC to make a person aware of a conversation without the primary recipient knowing.
Simply put, “reply all” means that when you draft an email response and hit send, your email will go to the original sender and all CC'ed (carbon copied) recipients. It doesn't send your email response to BCC (blind carbon copied) recipients — only email addresses that you can see on the thread.
While BCC helps protect the privacy of recipient email addresses, there are potential risks if not used appropriately. If a recipient replies to an email sent via BCC, their response may inadvertently reveal the presence of other recipients, compromising their privacy.
Risk of Being Flagged as Spam: Bulk emails sent via BCC may raise spam suspicions, potentially leading to your emails being filtered out or marked as spam by email providers.
Microsoft's answer to this question is that Reply All will only reply to the original Sender and the e-mail addresses in the To and Cc fields, not the Bcc fields. Gmail Help tells us the same. “Undisclosed recipients can only reply to who they can “see”.
to have a copy to store in the same folder as all the other related mails (you could technically move it from your "sent" folder, but then you can't find it there, or you'd have to copy it, which I'm not sure all mail clients do or like). To make sure the receiving party knows there is a record of the email.
Is there a way to see if someone was BCC D on an email?
You can't view the people who were BCC'ed. The information about who the email was sent to is not included in the email. There is no way of determining if it was sent to anyone else, and if so, who.
What happens if a Bcc replies all? If you click reply all on a Bcc response, everyone who got the original email will be exposed to all recipients along with your reply. If your Bcc recipient clicks 'reply all' you'll be the only one to get your email.
If you include someone in a BCC email and reply to you, they will address their response directly to you. They won't know that anyone else has copied this message unless you tell them or show them the original message (which you should always avoid).
Many people use the BCC when emailing a large group of people and wanting to keep from disclosing all their personal emails to each other. This is a completely acceptable and above-board reason to use BCC. It prevents you from violating privacy concerns and protects the recipient's privacy.
No, BCC (Blind Carbon Copy) recipients cannot see the email addresses of other BCC recipients. When you use the BCC field in an email, each recipient receives the message without being able to view the other BCC addresses. This is designed to maintain the privacy of the recipients included in the BCC field.
*BCC means ``blind carbon copy,'' which means no one will see who was copied on that email, and it is a term left over from the times of typewriters when people actually used something called carbon paper to make multiple copies of the same typed page.
What happens if someone replies to a BCC email on Gmail?
You should know that when using BCC, anyone who receives an individual copy of the message will be able to see each recipient's name (but not their address). If they choose to reply to the message, only those listed as CCed or copied on the original message will also receive any response from them.
Basal and squamous cell cancers don't often spread to other parts of the body. But if your doctor thinks your skin cancer might spread, you might need imaging tests, such as an MRI or CT scan.
Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is a type of skin cancer that can show up on the skin in many ways. Sometimes, it can be mistaken for a harmless pimple, scar, or sore. Most basal cell carcinoma's grow slowly.