Re: BCC is NOT blind!

From: Kataman (kataman@inorbit.com)
Date: Tue, 22 Apr 1997 12:05:01 -0400

In article <bgFXzsZA/J1P091yn@sco.com>, Gary H <garyh@sco.COM> wrote:
>Chris Szurgot <szurgot@itribe.net> wrote:
>|Works for me. BCC: should be striped by uqwk or souper or whatever you use
>|to transfer the mail. If it's not being removed there's a problem in that
>|program. What are you using?
>|
>|Chris
>
>I'm using uqwk. It works when I send mail outside, but when I did a test
>and mailed a coworker he told me the Bcc: was clearly visible. He fwd the
>msg back to me and sure enough, it was there.
>
>Gary
>
>|On Thu, 17 Apr 1997, Gary H wrote:
>|
>|> When I Bcc: someone, it shoulds up in the header as "Bcc: <email>"
>|> where <email> is whoever I put there. Why is my Bcc not blind?
>|> Thanks,
>|> Gary

I am using Yarn/2 v.90 with souper, when I send with BCC it is
blind. For example:
|To: Friends@the.net
|cc:
|Bcc:adress1, address2, address3

This will send the mail to the three addresses, they will only
see the To:Friends@the.net, they will not see the BCC:

-- 

Rumfoord retreated into his magazine again. The magazine opened naturally to the center spread, which was a color ad for MoonMist Cigarettes. MoonMist Tobacco, Ltd., had been bought recently by Malachi Constant.

_Pleasure in Depth!_ said the headline of the ad. The picture that went with it was the picture of the three sirens of Titan. There they were-- the white girl, the golden girl, and the brown girl.

The fingers of the golden girl were fortuitously spread as they rested on her left breast, permitting an artist to paint in a MoonMist Cigarette between two of them. The smoke form her cigarette passed beneath the nostrils of the brown and white girls, and their space-annihilating concupiscence seemed centered on mentholated smoke alone.

Rumfoord had known that Constant would try to debase the picture by using it in commerce. Constant's father had done a similar thing when he found he could not buy Leonardo's "Mona Lisa" at any price. The old man had punished Mona Lisa by having her used in an advertising campaign for suppositories. It was the free-enterprise way of handling beauty that threatened to get the upper hand.

_Sirens of Titan_, Kurt Vonnegut, Ch.2 [Quote #110 of 254 (avg. 13.42 lines)]

Marc "Kataman" Lombart Montreal, Canada PGP Key available on servers and by request