Electronic mail, often abbreviated as email or e-mail, is
a method of exchanging digital messages, designed primarily for human use.
An electronic mail message consists of two components, the message header, and the message body,
which is the email's content. The message header contains control information, including, minimally,
an originator's email address and one or more recipient addresses. Usually additional information is
added, such as a subject header field.
The foundation for today's global Internet e-mail service was created in the early ARPANET and standards
for encoding of messages were proposed as early as, for example, in 1973 (RFC 561). An e-mail sent in
the early 1970s looked very similar to one sent on the Internet today. Conversion from the ARPANET to
the Internet in the early 1980s produced the core of the current service.
Network-based email was initially exchanged on the ARPANET in extensions to the File Transfer Protocol
(FTP), but is today carried by the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP), first published as Internet
Standard 10 (RFC 821) in 1982. In the process of transporting email messages between systems, SMTP communicates
delivery parameters using a message envelope separately from the message (headers and body) itself.
Originally a text-only communications medium, email was extended to carry multi-media content attachments,
which were standardized in 1996 with RFC 2045 through RFC 2049, collectively called, Multipurpose Internet
Mail Extensions (MIME).
E-mail systems are based on a store-and-forward model in which e-mail computer server systems accept,
forward, deliver and store messages on behalf of users, who only need to connect to the e-mail infrastructure,
typically an e-mail server, with a network-enabled device (e.g., a personal computer) for the duration
of message submission or retrieval. Rarely is e-mail transmitted directly from one user's device to another's.
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