Since Carnap's notion of confirmation as probabilistic favorable relevance violates the intuitive Hempelian transmittability condition that confirmation of a hypothesis be transmitted to all the content of the hypothesis it cannot capture some key aspects of our intuitive notions of confirmation and inductive support. After all, if confirming a theory does not mean confirming those parts of the theory concerning the future why should we care about confirmation? An alternative notion of confirmation, called real confirmation, which satisfies the transmittability condition is defined through recourse to the new notion of (logical) content I have explicated elsewhere. Basically, evidence e is taken to really confirm h iff e raises the probabil...