I'm experimenting with Pegasus 4.7. I sent an email to to adress "X" with a BCC to "A" and "B". (All three addresses are mine with different email providers.) To my surprise, I noticed, when reading it as recipient A and then as recipient B, that in the detailed headers there is a BCC field with adressees A and B, both listed in the clear in a comma separated list. This should not be happening. Addressee A should never see addressee B and vice versa. BCC means (or should mean) that it is not only blind to X, the recipient in the "To" field, but also to each of the BCC recipients. Mailers other than Pegasus respect this principle.
When I am not using Pegasus, my mail client of choice is Yahoo mail. Yahoo does this correctly. It strips out the BCC field before sending, then it sends a copy to A and B, so that neither sees the address of the other, and of course, X sees none of the others. X's address is visible to A and B, but that is the norm and is expected behaviour, unlike Pegasus's behaviour described above, which is not expected and contrary to all accepted email etiquette.
Below is an extract of the relevant section in the detailed headers of the copy received by B, with the personal information redacted. I also have a transcript of the TCP session. If that is of interest to anyone, let me know and I'll post it here.
Moongazer.
Subject: test 1 with multiple BCCs
Reply-to: xxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx
BCC: aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa@aaaaa.aaa.aa, bbbbbbb@bbbbb.bbb
Message-ID: <5A9CA2DB.1587.11111111@xxxxxxx.xxxxx.xxx.xx>
X-Confirm-Reading-To: xxxxxxx@xxxxx.xxx.xx
X-pmrqc: 1
Return-receipt-to: xxxxxxx@xxxxx.xxx.xx
Priority: normal
X-mailer: Pegasus Mail for Windows (4.72.572)
<p><font size="3">I'm experimenting with Pegasus 4.7. I sent an email to to adress "X" with a BCC to "A" and "B". (All three addresses are mine with different email providers.) To my surprise, I noticed, when reading it as recipient A and then as recipient B, that in the detailed headers there is a BCC field with adressees A and B, both listed in the clear in a comma separated list. This should not be happening. Addressee A should never see addressee B and vice versa. BCC means (or should mean) that it is not only blind to X, the recipient in the "To" field, but also to each of the BCC recipients. Mailers other than Pegasus respect this principle.
</font></p><p><font size="3">When I am not using Pegasus, my mail client of choice is Yahoo mail. Yahoo does this correctly. It strips out the BCC field before sending, then it sends a copy to A and B, so that&nbsp; neither sees the address of the other, and of course, X sees none of the others. X's address is visible to A and B, but that is the norm and is expected behaviour, unlike Pegasus's behaviour described above, which is not expected and contrary to all accepted email etiquette.</font></p><p><font size="3">Below is an extract&nbsp; of the relevant section in the detailed headers of the copy received by B, with the personal information redacted.&nbsp; I also have a transcript of the TCP session. If that is of interest to anyone, let me know and I'll post it here.</font></p><p>Moongazer.</p><p><font size="3"><b>Subject:</b> test 1 with multiple BCCs
<b>Reply-to:</b> xxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx
<b>BCC:</b> aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa@aaaaa.aaa.aa, bbbbbbb@bbbbb.bbb
<b>Message-ID:</b> &lt;5A9CA2DB.1587.11111111@xxxxxxx.xxxxx.xxx.xx&gt;
<b>X-Confirm-Reading-To:</b> xxxxxxx@xxxxx.xxx.xx
<b>X-pmrqc:</b> 1
<b>Return-receipt-to:</b> xxxxxxx@xxxxx.xxx.xx
<b>Priority:</b> normal
<b>X-mailer:</b> Pegasus Mail for Windows (4.72.572)
</font></p><p>&nbsp;</p>