Quote Originally Posted by techgnome
That kinda defeats the purpose of a BCC... the point of a BCC is that the recipients don't know who else got it.

-tg
Maybe my explanation isn't clear:

They fill out an email, going to MainRecipient, CC'd to CCUser1 and CCUser2 and BCC's to BCCUser1 and BCCUser2. User hits "SEND"

This is what the program now does:

Send an email to MainRecipient with a CC to CCUser1, CCUser2. This message has no BCC recipients.

Send a copy of the email to BCCUser1 as the primary recipient. This message has no CC or BCC recipients. Include in the body: "You are a BCC Recipient, this message was originally sent to MainRecipient and CC'd to CCUser1, CCUser2."

Send a copy of the email to BCCUser2 as the primary recipient. This message has no CC or BCC recipients. Include in the body: "You are a BCC Recipient, this message was originally sent to MainRecipient and CC'd to CCUser1, CCUser2."

It does this because a BCC recipient can still see who the original recipient was and who it was CC'd to.