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author | Dave Whiteland <dave@mysociety.org> | 2015-03-03 13:44:00 +0000 |
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committer | Dave Whiteland <dave@mysociety.org> | 2015-03-03 13:44:00 +0000 |
commit | cb33b7c468ab01c40e2ef03ad6511f7873a881d9 (patch) | |
tree | bc8b6fc41022e29145798cd8ff216c02eb68b777 | |
parent | ed551bea6c10ddc03f99dd62cf978c61acaee0bc (diff) |
remove section: multiple to-addresses don't behave this way
-rw-r--r-- | docs/running/holding_pen.md | 6 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/docs/running/holding_pen.md b/docs/running/holding_pen.md index f957d4752..d791f609c 100644 --- a/docs/running/holding_pen.md +++ b/docs/running/holding_pen.md @@ -50,12 +50,6 @@ There are several reasons why a message might end up in the holding pen: for example if the person at the authority accidentally loses the first letter of the email address when they copy-and-paste it. Or if they copy it manually and simply get it wrong. - -* **the message is sent to multiple (valid) email addresses and one bad one**<br> - Sometimes an officer working for an authority may attempt to send email using - a collection of email addresses for your site. This is allowed, and the - response will be sent to each of them. However, if any of those addresses - are wrong (even just one), the response will go into the holding pen. * **there's something unusual about the way it was sent**<br> For example, if it was delivered here because the address is in the `Bcc:` |