Territorial Policy
- Territorial Policy
- Territorial policy (auntonomous communities)
- Autonomy statutes
- Transfer of functions and services
- Transfer royal decrees
- Operating rules of the Joint Committees of transfers
- General information and statistics of transfers: Transfer approved and full of joint commissions of transfers by State legislatures
- Basic data on transfers in the XV state legislature
- Basic data on transfers in the XIV state legislature
- Basic data on transfers in the XIII state legislature
- Basic data on transfers in the XII state legislature
- Basic data on transfers in the XI state legislature
- Basic data on transfers in the state legislature X
- Basic data on transfers in the ninth state legislature
- Basic data on transfers in region VIII state legislature
Problems with the password
10/12/2009
Some users have informed us that “I get a message that says that the password doesn’t match the one kept in Windows.”
If this happens to you, it most likely means that at some point you answered ‘YES’ when Windows offered to keep the password. We do not recommend doing that, either for IMI or as a general practice: when you tell a computer to learn your password, in some ways you are decreasing its security since anyone with access to it and who either knows or can guess (easily) your username can also skip the password. So it’s just as well that IMI requires that you also know 3 of the 12 digits of a secret code.
If you said ‘yes’ to Windows, what has probably happened is that the password it kept is the first you used, which is only temporary, as you have to change it later to a definite password. So the password that the system remembers and writes automatically is not the correct one.
There are two solutions:
1) To tell Windows to forget the password it has recorded. This may be a bit difficult to do, so better contact the IT technicians at you organisation for their guidance.
2) When the ‘does not match’ message appears, another option like ‘would you like Windows to replace your password on file with the new one you have just entered?’ usually appears. By answering yes, the computer will memorize the new password; just make sure to enter it correctly.
We recommend the first solution and that you enter your password from memory every time you access the system.
The other solution is Windows’ attempt to make the user’s life easier. Security is never easy, and we have to accept giving up the ease of not having to enter the password each time if that means ensuring better security conditions.