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Defect #752

closed

Outgoing emails contain Bcc

Added by Ben Oakes over 16 years ago. Updated over 16 years ago.

Status:
Closed
Priority:
Normal
Assignee:
-
Category:
-
Target version:
-
Start date:
2008-02-28
Due date:
% Done:

0%

Estimated time:
Resolution:
Wont fix
Affected version:

Description

When I submitted issue #751, I received an email that contained Bcc addresses. (I was surprised that Apple Mail.app even showed them -- I'm guessing that it was because it uses the same code to preview emails between drafts and inbox items.) This happened on the official Redmine redmine rather than the redmine we maintain where I work.

Here's a partial snipped of the email's source (bccs removed):

[...]

From:
Bcc: ...yahoo.fr, .......com,
Subject: [Redmine - Defect #751] Multiple "new"s in filing new ticket
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=mimepart_47c7274cb1ec1_3e29..fdbe3eb8497d
Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2008 13:29:42 -0800 (PST)
[...]

Actions #1

Updated by John Goerzen over 16 years ago

I'm seeing this too, from forum posts.

Actions #2

Updated by Jean-Philippe Lang over 16 years ago

I don't think it's related to the application since I don't see them when I do tests on my local setup.

Actions #3

Updated by John Goerzen over 16 years ago

Hi JP,

I'm not quite sure what you mean here.

When I got your reply to this very message, I saw in the headers:

{{{
From:
Bcc: edavis@...,
benjamin.d.oakes@...,
jgoerzen@...
}}}

I stripped the domain names here to prevent spam, but they sure were present on the message I got. They're also there on messages from forums.

The only possible reason the BCC line is there in the message I received is that Redmine (or Rails libraries under its control) put it there. BCC is somewhat of an odd beast. Lots of mail clients give the illusion that it's a header like every other, but in reality they are not putting a BCC line in the outgoing message. Rather, they just use the data entered there to give more recipients to the SMTP (or local sendmail) server. A BCC line should never enter the message body.

I know that there is a BCC setting. I haven't gone to play with it, so I'm not sure whether it enables or disables this behavior, or is a toggle between putting names on the BCC instead of To or CC lines.

Actions #4

Updated by Eric Davis over 16 years ago

I don't see the BCC in my mail client (Thunderbird 2.0) nor in the source of the mail message on the server.

From: noreply@redmine.org
Subject: [Redmine - Defect #752] Outgoing emails contain Bcc
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=mimepart_47dd8960e0f3b_6933..fdbe3d37e11fb
Date: Sun, 16 Mar 2008 13:56:38 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID: <47dd8986.0af5660a.47e5.ffffef94@mx.google.com>
To: undisclosed-recipients:;

--mimepart_47dd8960e0f3b_6933..fdbe3d37e11fb
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: Quoted-printable
Content-Disposition: inline

Actions #5

Updated by Thomas Löber over 16 years ago

I also see the BCC addressees. Do the mail servers keep them when there is no "To:" header?

Actions #6

Updated by Jean-Philippe Lang over 16 years ago

john wilson: I think it's related to the SMTP server I use (Google Apps).

Actions #7

Updated by M T over 16 years ago

Yes I looked into this problem once before and I also came to the conclusion that Google Mail was to blame!

Actions #8

Updated by Jean-Philippe Lang over 16 years ago

  • Status changed from New to Closed
  • Affected version (unused) deleted (devel)
  • Resolution set to Wont fix
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