>Hi Glenn, 
          Since you have been explaining how Cc:, Bcc:,
etc. works I have been experimenting with the Detroit
Freenet mailer. Bcc seems to work just the way you 
described it should. I can find none of the addresses
in the headers of mail sent by Bcc. However, I notice
all headers contain reference to whatever is listed
after To:. In other words, all recipients listed under
Bcc can see that "original" was sent to To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Is it possible to send email so that To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
doesn't appear in headers of Bcc recipients?

    Eric
>

With NetMail for DOS (maybe the Win32 version too?), you can send email with no
To: line at all.  I did it without really trying.  But I never tried to send a
CC or BCC with Net Mail for DOS.  To: line in .WRK file determines the
recipient.  If there is no To: line in .TXT file, message will have no To: line.
I suppose you could put a line To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] in the .TXT file?

I don't know what spammers use, but usually the To: line is not my email 
address.  Often To: address is the same as the Return-Path or From: address.
Most of the time with legitimate e-newsletters, To: address is not my email
address.

Maybe you could send email To: (your-own-address) and include [EMAIL PROTECTED]
in the BCC list?

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