I am affected with Password problem . I have been using a strong passwd. 
a few days back it began.
 While log in i have to enter password for a second time. at first time the log 
in window refuse permission. But when entering the password for a second time , 
allows log in.
I am using a laptop and my key board marking are not visible , is using a  key 
board through usb.  
Today I was totally refused login while booting. So I rebooted system and 
change my password through recovery , and when came back for login to desktop, 
the new password which was by -heart to me was rejected. So i have to went back 
repeat pwd change process. Then used the new pwd to log in . the next thing i 
did was to log into users and group session and taken option for to log in with 
out a password. when rebooted and attempted login , the log in window appeared 
and refused entry without password. When i gave my password , allowed log in. 
A window option for kerying also is asking similar repeated  incident for 
password even the correct password is entered. After a few repetition with the 
same pass word , it allows acceptance of the same password. something  wicked 
is playing.

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop
Packages, which is subscribed to gnome-control-center in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/882255

Title:
  No administrative actions possible (password refused) after enabling
  passwordless login

Status in “gnome-control-center” package in Ubuntu:
  Triaged

Bug description:
  If I choose not to have a password for my operating account, every
  operation fails if it needs root access. Reproducible even on a newly
  set up machine. See: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1862543

  Release: 11.10

  Steps to reproduce:
  1. Install Ubuntu 11.10 as normal. During installation, when you are asked to 
choose a password, enter one, since the installation can not continue if you do 
not do so.
  2. Boot the newly installed system and log in as usual.
  3. Choose "System Settings" from the launcher on the left and open "User 
Accounts".
  4. In the User Accounts window, click on Unlock at the top right of the 
dialog. Enter your user password when prompted.
  5. Click on the four dots next to the "Password" label to change your 
password.
  6. Select "Log in without a password" from the dropdown box. Close the window.
  7. Try to perform an action requiring administrative privileges. For example, 
try running "sudo apt-get update" from a terminal.

  Expected behavior:
  sudo should require the user's password and accept it, or proceed without 
requiring any password altogether.

  Actual behavior:
  sudo requires the user's password and does not accept it (since it is set to 
an empty string in /etc/shadow).

  Further notes:
  After disabling the password request at login, the /etc/shadow file related 
to the test user account I created looked like this:
  test::15283:0:99999:7:::
  This shows that the password hash is made completely empty; that conflicts 
with the policies listed in /etc/sudoers, which require a password to be given 
in order to perform
  administrative actions.

  Workaround:
  -If you can not perform administrative actions but can still login without a 
password, open a terminal and type "passwd". This command should prompt you for 
a new password and change it without any problems.
  -If you can not login, you can reset your password by booting into recovery 
mode and changing it there. Follow the instructions at 
<http://psychocats.net/ubuntu/resetpassword>.

  You may also choose to use a password for your account and to enable
  autologin at the same time. This choice will enable you to benefit the
  advantage of not entering a password at boot time with the security of
  Ubuntu requiring your password when attempting to perform privileged
  actions. Of course, this helps when you are the only desktop user or
  the primary one.

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-control-center/+bug/882255/+subscriptions

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