{i} copy of a document given as a courtesy to a third party without the primary receiver's knowledge
{i} common form of skin cancer malignant tumor (usually doesn't metastasizes) in which the cancer cells look like the basal cells of the epidermis and is found on the face and neck where the skin is exposed to ultraviolet sunlight (it appears as a bleeding or scabbing that doesn't heal)
Blind Carbon Copy To send an e-mail where the addressee does not see that the letter was also sent to a third party
Blind carbon copy This is a field in your email program that will send a copy of your message to a person without the primary recipient knowing The email address of the BCC recipient will not appear on the resulting email, and any replies to the message will not be sent to them
campaigns nationally on behalf of accredited chambers' members, exerting influence on the Government to create a more favourable business environment
Abbreviation for blind carbon copies When composing email, the writer has the option of sending copies to others so the recipients cannot see each other's email addresses and are not aware that copies are going to addresses other than their own
Short for blind carbon copy, a copy of an E-Mail sent to a third party without the primary recipient's knowledge
"blind carbon copy," i e , a copy (or many copies) of an e-mail message, sent to other recipients, without the recipients' being able to see the distribution list Useful when sending mail to an entire departmental list without forcing users to scroll through screensful of mailnames in the conventional cc field Eudora has a bcc field, but early versions of the Pine e-mailer required a change in configuration before the bcc field appeared
-(Blind Carbon Copy) a feature in Outlook that allows a large group to be copied on a message while hiding the list of copied users from the recipients
The "b" stands for blind That is, no one on the list sees who the other recipients are Always use the bcc function when doing large mailings, e g your newsletter
Blind carbon copy For example: To: huey@dsny com Cc: dewey@dsny com Bcc: louie@dsny com This e-mail will go to huey, dewey and louie louie will see all the recipients except himself dewey will not see louie's address on this e-mail If you want to send a message to a lot of people and you do not want them to see each other's address, put them in the Bcc: field (and put your own address in the To: field) Also, keep in mind you may make a mistake and send the e-mail to the wrong person
A parity error checking character added to data for the purposes of detecting transmission errors
Blind Carbon Copy The blind carbon copy feature of most e-mail programs permits you to send the same e-mail message to numerous individuals without revealing the recipient's e-mail addresses to each other
Blind Courtesy Copy or Blind Carbon Copy A way to send an e-mail message to more than one recipient, without the parties knowing that an identical message was sent to others Using the BCC is a good way to avoid the long list of recipients that your correspondents usually have to wade through in the header of a mass-mailing See CC
Blind Carbon Copy, allows you to send a copy of an e-mail to somebody and you do not wish other the party to know that another copy was sent, you can place their e-mail address in the BCC area of your e-mail client A list of all recipients of the e-mail appears on the message, except those listed in the BCC
Abbreviation for Blind Carbon Copy To bcc: an email message to someone is to send them a copy of the email message without the knowledge of the person to whom the email message is addressed to
Stands for "Blind Carbon Copy" which means that you can send the same email to a number of people at the same time, and the recipients won't see the email addresses of all those you sent it to Most email packages have the "BCC" feature There are so many email packages it is impossible to give the methods used for each Your best bet is to go to the help routines in the package you are using and search on either "BCC" or "blind carbon copy" Processor: The brain of the computer The computer chip that that does all the number crunching that makes your PC live
Blind carbon copymakes the selected users address invisible to other invitation recipients Note: If no To recipient has been specified, Bcc recipients will appear in the message header
blind carbon copy used in an email to show that you are sending someone a copy of a message that you have also sent to someone else, and that this person does not know that other people will also receive the message
Insert email addresses into the BCC field of an outgoing email to send an email to one or more recipients, without revealing the email addresses of all the recipients
stands for blind carbon copy; sends a copy of an e-mail message to a second person, but doesn't allow the first recipient to see the name and address of the second one
This is a "blind cc," which means that the original addressee will not know that a copy of your message is going to this person It's not considered polite to use this except when you want to send a blind cc to yourself It's especially useful if you have two mailboxes and don't want the recipient of your message to get confused Not all mail programs have the bcc option
Blind Carbon Copy Using this address field in an e-mail will disguise any recipients listed in the field from other recipients If you need to send an e-mail to many people, especially a message that is likely to get forwarded to others, it is a good idea to use the BCC field This will prevent the recipients from having to scroll through a long list of e-mail addresses before they can read the message
Blind Carbon Copy A space on your email that allows you to send a secret copy of your message
An acronym for "blind carbon copy " You will find a Bcc: field when you are creating an e-mail message If you enter an e-mail address into this field, the message will be sent to that address, but it will not be visible to other recipients