Medido el 2026-07-09 · DNS público
¿Está meurthe-moselle.fr protegido contra la suplantación de correo?
No — meurthe-moselle.fr no tiene política DMARC y puede ser suplantado.
Más protegido que el 0 % de commune en Francia
El 13 % del sector ya aplica p=reject
F
DMARC
ausente
SPF
ausente
DKIM
ninguno encontrado
Cómo corregirlo
Thomas, tu CISO virtual con IA, identifica cada fuente, escribe el DNS exacto y lleva tu dominio de p=none a p=reject con total seguridad.
Qué significa esto
- • Aucun enregistrement DMARC publié (_dmarc.<domaine>). Les destinataires n'ont aucune politique à appliquer.
- • Aucun enregistrement SPF (v=spf1) publié sur le domaine.
- • Aucune clé DKIM trouvée sur les sélecteurs courants (le domaine peut utiliser des sélecteurs non standards).
Historial
- 2026-07-09Primera mediciónSin DMARC
Sobre Département Meurthe-et-Moselle
The Meurthe-et-Moselle department is a French territorial authority attached to the Grand Est region. It was established in 1871, following the Treaty of Frankfurt, which led to the annexation of part of the Moselle department by the German Empire. It resulted from the merger of the arrondissements that remained French from that former department with most of the Meurthe department. Its name reflects this origin, combining the two rivers that flow through its territory, the Meurthe and the Moselle. Since its creation, it has functioned both as an administrative division of the State and as a decentralized territorial authority responsible for local government.
The territory is organized into several arrondissements, including Nancy, Briey, Lunéville and Toul. Nancy serves as the administrative center, hosting the main administrative, cultural and academic institutions of the department. Meurthe-et-Moselle borders the departments of Meuse, Moselle and Vosges, and also shares a border with Luxembourg and Belgium, giving it a cross-border position within the European area. This geographic setting makes it a mixed rural, urban and industrial territory, shaped by a long history linked to metallurgy and mining activities.
Like other French departments, the authority exercises responsibilities in various fields, including social welfare, child protection, employment support, maintenance of departmental roads, management of middle schools, cultural heritage promotion, tourism and environmental matters. It also provides support to municipalities and intercommunal bodies within its territory. Its administration is carried out by an elected departmental council, whose executive is led by a president, assisted by vice-presidents responsible for different public policy areas.
The website meurthe-moselle.fr is the official site of the department, presenting its responsibilities, institutional news, and various services and information intended for residents and local stakeholders.
