e-mail addresses - meaning and definition. What is e-mail addresses
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What (who) is e-mail addresses - definition

IDENTIFIER OF THE DESTINATION WHERE EMAIL MESSAGES ARE DELIVERED
Eddress; E-mail addresses; Plus addressing; HTML form e-mail address validation; User:BenB4/Email sandbox; Email addresses; Plus address; E-mail address; Email Address Internationalization; Identity validation; Address tag (Email); Subaddressing; Subaddress; Sub-addressing; Email address internationalization; E-Mailaddress

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An email address identifies an email box to which messages are delivered. While early messaging systems used a variety of formats for addressing, today, email addresses follow a set of specific rules originally standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in the 1980s, and updated by .
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Email address.
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Wikipedia

Email address

An email address identifies an email box to which messages are delivered. While early messaging systems used a variety of formats for addressing, today, email addresses follow a set of specific rules originally standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in the 1980s, and updated by RFC 5322 and 6854. The term email address in this article refers to just the addr-spec in Section 3.4 of RFC 5322. The RFC defines address more broadly as either a mailbox or group. A mailbox value can be either a name-addr, which contains a display-name and addr-spec, or the more common addr-spec alone.

An email address, such as john.smith@example.com, is made up from a local-part, the symbol @, and a domain, which may be a domain name or an IP address enclosed in brackets. Although the standard requires the local part to be case-sensitive, it also urges that receiving hosts deliver messages in a case-independent manner, e.g., that the mail system in the domain example.com treat John.Smith as equivalent to john.smith; some mail systems even treat them as equivalent to johnsmith. Mail systems often limit the users' choice of name to a subset of the technically permitted characters.

With the introduction of internationalized domain names, efforts are progressing to permit non-ASCII characters in email addresses.

Examples of use of e-mail addresses
1. He then exchanges phone numbers and e–mail addresses.
2. The files were voluminous: 37,000 written documents, 8,000 e–mail addresses, 210,000 images and more.
3. Sam‘s haul for the day: six e–mail addresses and a phone number.
4. And ticketholders were asked for their e–mail addresses when they signed up to attend.
5. Police found 3,000 suspicious e–mail addresses during their investigations and used them to track suspects.