From: Victoria on 3 Jun 2010 15:25 Using Outlook 2007/Exchange Server 2007 Hello: I sometimes miss that I'm receiving an email as a blind copy. I was hoping to create a rule to alert me when I'm in the BCC field. However, when using the rules wizard, I only see the options regarding my name in the To or CC field. Is there a way to create this that I may be missing? Thank you.
From: Duncan McC on 3 Jun 2010 19:58 In article <#pJLIK1ALHA.4704(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl>, victoria(a)dig.com says... > > Using Outlook 2007/Exchange Server 2007 > > Hello: > > I sometimes miss that I'm receiving an email as a blind copy. I was hoping > to create a rule to alert me when I'm in the BCC field. However, when using > the rules wizard, I only see the options regarding my name in the To or CC > field. Is there a way to create this that I may be missing? > > Thank you. Nope, that's how BCC works (wouldn't be "blind" otherwise) :) -- Duncan.
From: VanguardLH on 3 Jun 2010 23:13 Duncan McC wrote: > In article <#pJLIK1ALHA.4704(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl>, victoria(a)dig.com > says... >> >> Using Outlook 2007/Exchange Server 2007 >> >> Hello: >> >> I sometimes miss that I'm receiving an email as a blind copy. I was hoping >> to create a rule to alert me when I'm in the BCC field. However, when using >> the rules wizard, I only see the options regarding my name in the To or CC >> field. Is there a way to create this that I may be missing? >> >> Thank you. > > Nope, that's how BCC works (wouldn't be "blind" otherwise) :) Do you know what "Bcc" stands for? It's BLIND Carbon Copy. That means every recipient that was specified by use of the Bcc *field* (not header) by the sender will never see that they were specified as a recipient. There is no Bcc header in the received copy of an e-mail where the recipient was specified in the Bcc field in the sender's e-mail client. The recipient never does get to see who are the true recipients of an e-mail. The To, Cc, and Bcc *fields* are just input controls in the UI for the sender's e-mail client. They may not even be used in specifying the recipients of an e-mail, as when using a listserver to send out bulk e-mails where the boilerplate e-mail is data and a separate list of recipients is kept in a file. The e-mail client compiles an aggregate list of recipients from the To, Cc, and Bcc *fields* in the UI of the e-mail client. That list is used to generate the RCPT-TO commands that the e-mail client sends to the mail server. It is that list of RCPT-TO commands, one for each recipient, that actually specifies who are the recipients. That list of RCPT-TO commands is followed by a single DATA command that contains the message - and that message also include the To and Cc header but that is *data* that the e-mail client entered in the DATA command and was *not* used to specify the recipients of the message to the mail server. By using mailmerge or a listserver, the recipients are not even specified in the message but instead come from a separate file that is the mailing list. Your e-mail client has *fields* showing the To, Cc, and Bcc fields in its UI. Your e-mail client uses that list of recipients to send RCPT-TO commands to your mail server. Your e-mail client will add the To and Cc headers - but NOT the Bcc header - to the *data* of your message. Those headers inside your message were NOT used to directly specify the recipients of your e-mail so it is very possible the e-mail client puts one set of values in the To and Cc headers inside the message but issues different RCPT-TO commands to the mail server. Only if an e-mail client is misconfigured or broken will it add a Bcc header into the message (header section, blank delimiter line, body section). Even if a broken e-mail client includes the Bcc header, many if not the prevalent majority of mail servers will strip out the Bcc header since it is not supposed to be included in the message. That means you, as the recipient, should never see a Bcc header in the e-mail that you receive. So how are you going to test on a header that doesn't exist? Well, you could test by looking for the absence of your e-mail address in the To and Cc headers. Normally if you were specified in the Bcc field then you were not also specified in either the To or Cc field, so the lack of your e-mail address in the To and Cc headers would indicate that you were probably a Bcc'ed recipient; however, for mailing lists, it is likely that all recipients were effectively Bcc'ed (because the RCPT-TO commands were not generated by any To, Cc, or Bcc fields in the boilerplate message, if they were even specified).
From: VanguardLH on 3 Jun 2010 23:15 Oops, sorry. My reply was supposed to be to Victoria, not to Duncan. Had the wrong post selected when I replied.
From: Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] on 4 Jun 2010 09:15 "Victoria(a)dig" <victoria(a)dig.com> wrote in message news:%23pJLIK1ALHA.4704(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... > I sometimes miss that I'm receiving an email as a blind copy. I was hoping > to create a rule to alert me when I'm in the BCC field. However, when using > the rules wizard, I only see the options regarding my name in the To or CC > field. Is there a way to create this that I may be missing? Create a rule that alerts for everything, but add the exception "except if my name is in the To or Cc box". This should alert you only when you were Bcc'd -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]
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