BCC In Sent Items - discrepancies

G

Guest

I have a user that is sending emails to multiple recipients (say 20) in the
bcc field. In her sent items, SOME of the messages show the email addy's in
the bcc field, others do not - in fact the bcc field doesn't even show on
those particular emails. All of these emails are sent in exactly the same
method, so there should be no differences in theory...

I'm not trying to get the email addy's from the emails that do not show them
(as I know how to do that), I would just like to know what the expected view
should be (should the addy's be visible by default) and why the discrepancies
exist.

Thanks in advance!!
 
V

Vanguard

da crusher said:
I have a user that is sending emails to multiple recipients (say 20)
in the
bcc field. In her sent items, SOME of the messages show the email
addy's in
the bcc field, others do not - in fact the bcc field doesn't even
show on
those particular emails. All of these emails are sent in exactly
the same
method, so there should be no differences in theory...

I'm not trying to get the email addy's from the emails that do not
show them
(as I know how to do that), I would just like to know what the
expected view
should be (should the addy's be visible by default) and why the
discrepancies
exist.


There is no Bcc header (it is defined in the RFC for Internet
Messaging Format but hasn't been included for a couple decades). The
"headers" in Outlook are just input fields. It's part of the UI.
They are not used to route e-mails. The e-mail client compiles an
aggregate of all e-mail addresses and sends a RCPT-TO command for each
one which is then followed by one DATA command for the message (which
includes the *fields*, aka headers, added by the e-mail client, a
blank line as a delimiter, and the body of the message). All those
"headers" are just data within the content of the message (and why
spammers can put anything they want in there since it is all data sent
in the DATA command). So for 20 recipients, the sender's e-mail
client sends 20 RCPT-TO commands to their mail server and then 1 DATA
command. The mail server never gets the content of the To, Cc, or Bcc
*fields* in the UI for the e-mail client.

If a Bcc "header" is being shown in the received e-mail then the
sending e-mail client put it in the *data* of their message. Outlook
never includes the content of the Bcc *field* in its UI in the *data*
of the message. Maybe the sender used some other e-mail client and
has it misconfigured or deliberately added the "Bcc:" line into the
*data* of the message. Maybe a plug-in to Outlook is screwing up.
 
G

Guest

Thanks for the details! I apologize for not being clear.

My user is the sender of the message and is looking at the message they sent
in their Sent Items folder in Outlook. It is here that for some of their
previously sent messages where the BCC field was used, to they see the list
of recipients vs others they do not even see the BCC field at all.
 
V

Vanguard

in message
Thanks for the details! I apologize for not being clear.

My user is the sender of the message and is looking at the message
they sent
in their Sent Items folder in Outlook. It is here that for some of
their
previously sent messages where the BCC field was used, to they see
the list
of recipients vs others they do not even see the BCC field at all.

The user must open the mail item in its own window (double-click on
the message). Then the Bcc field, if it was used, is shown. If the
"View -> Bcc Field" menu entry is disabled, the Bcc field was not
used.
 
G

Guest

Unfortunately, that is not the case. If it go to the Sent Items folder and
select an email that does not have the BCC field visible, open the email and
select Action > resend > it will fill in the BCC field with all the users
that were orginally there....

Thanks for your persistence....
 
V

Vanguard

in message
Unfortunately, that is not the case. If it go to the Sent Items
folder and
select an email that does not have the BCC field visible, open the
email and
select Action > resend > it will fill in the BCC field with all the
users
that were orginally there....

Thanks for your persistence....


Maybe Microsoft broke something in a version later than 2002 that I
still use (no bang-for-the-buck for me to bother with later versions).
You didn't mention which version of Outlook the problem is exhibited.

If disabling all add-ons and plug-ins doesn't help, or running Outlook
in its safe mode ("outlook.exe /safe") doesn't help, try using the
Help -> Detect and Repair menu.
 
G

Guest

Sorry, I forgot that detail. We are running Outlook 2003 SP2.

What leads me away from it being workstation specific is that I can open the
user's mailbox on another machine and it acts identically, ie; I see the
missing bcc's on some emails while other are visible...
 
V

Vanguard

in message
Sorry, I forgot that detail. We are running Outlook 2003 SP2.

What leads me away from it being workstation specific is that I can
open the
user's mailbox on another machine and it acts identically, ie; I see
the
missing bcc's on some emails while other are visible...

When I mentioned opening the suspect mail item (that supposedly used
the Bcc field when that message got sent), simply selecting the
message to view it in the Preview pane will not show the Bcc field.
You have to *open* the mail item in its own window (and perhaps use
View -> Bcc), not preview it in a pane, to see the Bcc field if it was
used when the message was sent.

So when you resend a mail that prepopulates the Bcc field, is the Bcc
field missing from the *view* window when that mail is *opened*?

Are you using the embedded editor in Outlook when composing new mails?
Or do you have Outlook configured to use Word as the new e-mail
editor?

Any forms or templates being used? If so, tried sending without them?
 
G

Guest

I have jsut encountered the same problem. It looks like an Outlook 2007 bug.
I can't see the BCC addresses in the Sent email either. It sucks. I hope
somebody finds an answer.
 

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