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Distributed authentication

One of the more tedious moments in visiting a new website is filling out the registration form. Here at WallStNewsletters.com - The Premier Financial Newsletter Portal , you do not have to fill out a registration form if you are already a member of Drupal. This capability is called distributed authentication, and Drupal, the software which powers WallStNewsletters.com - The Premier Financial Newsletter Portal , fully supports it.

Distributed authentication enables a new user to input a username and password into the login box, and immediately be recognized, even if that user never registered at WallStNewsletters.com - The Premier Financial Newsletter Portal . This works because Drupal knows how to communicate with external registration databases. For example, lets say that new user 'Joe' is already a registered member of Delphi Forums. Drupal informs Joe on registration and login screens that he may login with his Delphi ID instead of registering with WallStNewsletters.com - The Premier Financial Newsletter Portal . Joe likes that idea, and logs in with a username of joe@remote.delphiforums.com and his usual Delphi password. Drupal then contacts the remote.delphiforums.com server behind the scenes (usually using XML-RPC, HTTP POST, or SOAP) and asks: "Is the password for user Joe correct?". If Delphi replies yes, then we create a new WallStNewsletters.com - The Premier Financial Newsletter Portal account for Joe and log him into it. Joe may keep on logging into WallStNewsletters.com - The Premier Financial Newsletter Portal in the same manner, and he will always be logged into the same account.

Drupal

Drupal is the name of the software that powers WallStNewsletters.com - The Premier Financial Newsletter Portal . There are Drupal websites all over the world, and many of them share their registration databases so that users may freely log in to any Drupal site using a single Drupal ID.

So please feel free to log in to your account here at WallStNewsletters.com - The Premier Financial Newsletter Portal with a username from another Drupal site. The format of a Drupal ID is similar to an e-mail address: username@server. An example of a valid Drupal ID is mwlily@drupal.org.