Social Sciences, asked by rkumarbounsi77, 5 months ago

uttarakhand is tsunami prone​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

"Himalayas are not only prone, it is, I would say, extremely prone to landslides, recurrent landslides, disastrous landslides, which have taken a toll on hundreds of people of the villages located in the zone,"

please mark me as the brainliest

Answered by Anonymous
0

Explanation:

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Why did I get a message saying I sent spam?

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Occasionally, you might receive one or more "bounce" messages or "out of the office" messages saying that you sent a spam message to a nonexistent address, even though you know you didn't send it. Or someone might tell you that they received a spam message that appeared to come from your address. In some cases, spammers might even use your own address on spam or scams they send to you.

This can be quite alarming — it makes it seem that someone is using your account without your knowledge.

However, the spammer probably did not send the message through your account or our servers, and he has no access to your account or email, especially if you’ve changed your email password.

Instead, the spammer likely just “forged” your address as the return address of a message he sent through unrelated servers.

On this page:

About forged addresses

Will I get blamed for the spam?

How can someone forge my address without access to my account?

If they aren’t sent through my account, how is the spammer sending messages to people I know?

How can I know for sure if this is what’s happening?

Why did a spammer choose to use my domain name?

What can I do about it?

Why do I continue to receive bounce messages for five days after the spammer stops using my address?

Are there technical solutions like “SPF”, “DKIM” and DMARC that can help stop forgeries?

About forged addresses

Almost no spammer uses his own address when he sends a message, because that would allow ISPs to easily block the messages. Instead, spammers forge other people's addresses. They prefer to use addresses from real working domain names, because real domain names are less likely to be rejected by spam filters.

This is an extremely common problem on the Internet. Almost every piece of spam you ever receive uses the forged "From" address of an innocent victim. Since spammers send billions of messages a day and always need new addresses, they might someday forge your domain name, too.

Will I get blamed for the spam?

No email administrator will think you're responsible for spam just because the spammer used your address as the "From" address. All email administrators know that "From" addresses on spam are usually forged and should be ignored. Automatic spam reporting services such as SpamCop will also ignore the forged sender address. You won't be blamed for it by Tiger Technologies or anyone else with control over your email.

Occasionally a spam recipient who doesn't understand how email works might blame you for it and send you a nasty note. Remember that such people are just frustrated at the spam they receive and don't know what else to do; you can point the person to our page that explain that you didn't send it, which also suggests that the person use a free service like SpamCop to report it to the proper authorities.

How can someone forge my address without access to my account?

A weakness of the Internet mail system is that many ISPs allow any of their customers to send email claiming to be from any address they want. For example, with many ISPs, you could open your mail program settings and change the "From" address to be "[email protected]", and every message you sent from then on would say it was from "[email protected]".

What's more, if you sent a message to an invalid address, the "bounce" would go back to "[email protected]", even though you had no access to the U.S. president's mailbox and the president had nothing to do with the message that was sent.

What this means is that pretty much anyone (including spammers) can forge any address, including your address, on an email message, even if they don't have access to your email account.

That might seem surprising, but if you think about it, it's the same way paper mail works. Someone could send a paper letter that forges your postal address as the "from" address on the envelope, even if he didn't have any access to your house. If that letter was undeliverable, it would be "returned" to you at the forged address.

So Internet email is no different than paper letters. It's just more likely to happen because it costs spammers almost nothing to send an email message.

If they aren’t sent through my account, how is the spammer sending messages to people I know?

If a spammer guessed or obtained your email password (perhaps because you used the same password elsewhere), then accessed your mailbox, they can build a list of addresses you send mail to or from. They can then use that list in their forgeries, even after you’ve changed your password to prevent them from sending through our servers.

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