Version: 3.5.6 (using KDE KDE 3.5.6) Installed from: Ubuntu Packages OS: Linux I know a woman who insists on using a numerical password for KDE applications because she can enter it no matter which language the keyboard layout is in. Therefore I suggest an option that KDE passwords (user, kwallet, etc.) be accepted depending only upon which keys are pressed, no matter which keyboard layout is selected. For example, the Hebrew letter "ש" is on the same key as English "a". So if the Kwallet password is "a" then the password "ש" would also be accepted. I do not think that this would reduce security as much as it may look. This does not reduce the amount of unique characters that one could use as a password. If crackers were to try to brute force a password, they would still have to check all the Latin characters individually, not like with case insensitivity. Also note that this feature would be optional, that is, a user would have to explicitly configure KDE to do this.
This shouldn't be a behaviour only of KDE, but of the whole system. You should suggest to distributions/lsb. If only kde will works in this way, it could generate a lot of confusion to users.
Filed at Ubuntu here: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+bug/311606
Good, if you've some more free time, you could even tell it "PAM" developers and to debian and/or fedora. It looks like a particular request, more people you inform, more can give you an answer about it :-)
Filed at Suse here: https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=462606