David Shaw wrote: > On Apr 25, 2009, at 6:14 PM, John Clizbe wrote: >> >> Enigmail passes GnuPG a list of recipients to encrypt to. It does not >> generate separate messages, only the one. This is a constraint of >> Thunderbird's architecture. >> >> BCCed recipients are treated as just another recipient. There is only >> one copy of the message and one set of encrypted session keys. > > I'm not sure if Enigmail has sufficient control here (due to the > Thunderbird restrictions), but if possible, it might be wise to handle > Bcc's recipients with --hidden-recipient instead of --recipient (i.e. > "-r"). That would better duplicate the standard expectations of a > user using Bcc: the regular recipients can all see who the recipients > are, but not the Bcc'd people. As things stand now, any recipient can > see who was Bcc'd, which sort of removes the "B" from the Bcc.
Excellent suggestion, David. Thank you. Filed as an RFE in Bugzilla: https://www.mozdev.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20867 -- John P. Clizbe Inet:John (a) Mozilla-Enigmail.org You can't spell fiasco without SCO. hkp://keyserver.gingerbear.net or mailto:pgp-public-k...@gingerbear.net?subject=help Q:"Just how do the residents of Haiku, Hawai'i hold conversations?" A:"An odd melody / island voices on the winds / surplus of vowels"
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