Bcc

2020-04-11 Thread Dave Close
When I use Bcc with exmh, the recipient receives a *text* copy of my entire message -- including all headers, MIME parts, and attachments. Most are completely dumbfounded by this and unable to make sense of the message. I would think that the only difference that should occur between a Bcc and an o

Re: Bcc

2020-04-11 Thread Ken Hornstein
>When I use Bcc with exmh, the recipient receives a *text* copy of my >entire message -- including all headers, MIME parts, and attachments. >Most are completely dumbfounded by this and unable to make sense of >the message. I would think that the only difference that should occur >between a Bcc and

Re: Bcc

2020-04-11 Thread Valdis Klētnieks
On Sat, 11 Apr 2020 16:58:16 -0700, Dave Close said: > When I use Bcc with exmh, the recipient receives a *text* copy of my > entire message -- including all headers, MIME parts, and attachments. > Most are completely dumbfounded by this and unable to make sense of > the message. I'm not surprised

Re: Bcc

2020-04-11 Thread Robert Elz
Date:Sat, 11 Apr 2020 20:41:16 -0400 From:Ken Hornstein Message-ID: <20200412004120.97b94b3...@pb-smtp21.pobox.com> | For reasons I am NOT completely clear on, the authors of MH decided | a long time ago that sending what the rest of the world knows as a | Bcc

Re: Bcc

2020-04-11 Thread Dave Close
I wrote: > When I use Bcc with exmh, the recipient receives a *text* copy of my > entire message -- including all headers, MIME parts, and attachments. > Most are completely dumbfounded by this and unable to make sense of > the message. I would think that the only difference that should occur > be