Before i had read more answer,but still i am in confuse,so please give some simple answer,which releats to only,what is the main defference job between that.
What dose mean cc and bcc at email compose page.?
What is the difference between Cc and Bcc?
Cc stands for carbon copy which means that whose address appears after the Cc: header would receive a copy of the message. Also, the Cc header would also appear inside the header of the received message.
Bcc stands for blind carbon copy which is similar to that of Cc except that the Email address of the recipients specified in this field do not appear in the received message header and the recipients in the To or Cc fields will not know that a copy sent to these address.
Reply:C C is a 'carbon copy', which you publicly despatch, while informing the main recipient of your mail.
B C C is a 'blind carbon copy', which is despatched without letting the main recipient of your mail know that it is being sent !
Reply:If you are sending an email, and CC it to some other email, the receipients of CC (i.e. an open copy of an email) will see each others addresses. If you send it BCC each single receipient will recieve his/her own copy, and will not see the email addresses of other people who you have sent it to.
For instance, if you are sending the same message to your friends, say "how are you guys doing?", you can send it via CC, as you do not care whether your friends will know each others addresses...
But, if you are sending a business price quote to your business partners, you would want to send it through BCC, as you do not want your business partners to know each others email addresses, which is basically a commercial secret...
Reply:CC - stands for carbon copy. This is a hold over from the days when typewriters were used to create letters, and a carbon sheet was used in the typewriter to make a duplicate copy of the letter. When you add a name to the cc area that person gest a copy of the email as well.
BCC - Stands for blind copy (Or blind carbon copy) The main difference here is that no one but the sender knows the people in the BCC list. People that receive the email do not see the list of users listed in the BCC. It is like sneding some people the email in secret.
Reply:When you send an email to someone you put their email address in the TO: line. You can also put it in the cc line. But if you are sending an email to a bunch of people and you don't want anyone else to see their email address you put it in the bcc line.
Reply:cc: carbon copy (sends a copy to everyone listed)
bcc: blind carbon copy (sends a copy to everyone listed but doesn't include the e-mail addresses of anyone else listed in the bcc line)
bcc is a good way to copy everyone you know without everyone you know finding out everyone you know! :-)
Reply:cc means carbon copy.. as in send another copy to a second person.. and bcc means blind carbon copy as in the mail will be forwarded to the second person without the recipant knowing it.
Reply:carbon copy
blind carbon copy
Reply:Cc:
"Cc" is short for "carbon copy". Those naming and designing this email feature probably had the real world counterpart to email, letters, in mind. The ingenious invention of carbon copy paper made it possible to send the same letter to two (or even more if you press real hard) different people without the onerous task of having to write or type it twice.
The analogy works well to understand what putting an email address in the Cc: field does. The message you compose is sent to the person in the To: field, of course.
But a copy of exactly the same message is also sent to all the addresses listed in the Cc: field. Yes, there can be more than one email address in this field, and they all get a copy. To enter more than one address in the Cc: field, separate them with commas.
The Shortcomings of Cc:
When you send a message to more than one address using the Cc: field, both the original recipient and all the recipients of the carbon copies see the To: and Cc: fields including all the addresses in them.
This means that every recipient gets to know the email addresses of all the persons that received your message. This is usually not desirable. Nobody likes their email address exposed in public.
Full Cc: fields also don't look all that good. They can become quite long and grow big on the screen. There will be lots of email addresses and little message text.
Bcc:
The long version of "Bcc" is "blind carbon copy". If this gives you the image of an empty sheet of paper -- a carbon copy without text --, that's not quite what email's Bcc: is up to.
The Bcc: field helps you deal with the problems created by Cc:. As it is the case with the Cc: field, a copy of the message goes to every single email address appearing in the Bcc: field. The difference is that neither the Bcc: field itself nor the email addresses in it appear in any of the copies (and not in the message sent to the person in the To: field either).
The only recipient address that will be visible to all recipients is the one in the To: field. So, to keep maximum anonymity you can put your own address in the To: field and use Bcc: exclusively to address your message.
Cc: and Bcc: Netiquette
Bcc: is a nice and powerful tool. But you still should limit its use to cases when it is clear that the message was sent to multiple recipients whose addresses are protected using Bcc:. You could mention the other recipients at the end of the email by name, but not by email address.
In any case, Bcc: not a spying device. How would you feel when a message addressed to you might also have reached a number of other people, but you did not know who?
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