I'm in the USA and have a raspberry pi 2 and 4 usb adapters.  1 of which was sold with the raspberry pi 2, another that I bought based on online reviews saying that it worked (plug-n-go) with linux and the Raspberry Pi, and also 2 other devices.  All of them locate the available wifi-hotspots and show their signal strengths, but none of them will actually connect, even though I've put in the password properly.  Rasbian doesn't deliver any failure message, any success message, or any report of any type after I key in my password into popup that asks for it.  The only think that happens after I type in my password and hit okay is that the popup disappears.  No internet connection.

So, I don't think this is an issue with a USB wifi adapter.  It seems to be something going on with Raspbian (Debian-Jessie) ... or perhaps a rare hardware failure on my RPi2.  Is there a configuration file I should edit?  Should I try another operating system or rebuilding from scratch Raspberry Pi 2?    I'm at a complete lose as to what the problem is.  I've used both a desktop and a laptop with Linux (Kubuntu and Ubuntu) to connect to this password enabled wifi spot, but the Raspberry Pi 2 fails.  I'm looking for any suggestions that you think might be helpful.

PS-  I've already tried the diagnostics from BASH, running lsusb and lsmod and looking at their hardware, and following the standard troubleshooting to get the usb wifi adapters to work.  They are finding the signal strengths of all the wifi hotspots, but none of them can actually connect.  So, I have yet to use this RPi2 with wifi.

--EDIT--
===================

wpa_supplicant.conf
-------------------

    ctrl_interface=DIR=/var/run/wpa_supplicant GROUP=netdev
    update_config=1
    
    network={
    	ssid="dlink"
    	key_mgmt=NONE
    	wep_key0="myPasswordHere"
    }
    
    network={
    	ssid="xfinitywifi"
    	key_mgmt=NONE
    }
    
    network={
    	ssid="HPE710n.802B4F"
    	key_mgmt=NONE
    }

interfaces
----------

    # Please note that this file is written to be used with dhcpcd.
    # For static IP, consult /etc/dhcpcd.conf and 'man dhcpcd.conf'.
    
    auto lo
    iface lo inet loopback
    
    auto eth0
    allow-hotplug eth0
    iface eth0 inet manual
    
    auto wlan0
    allow-hotplug wlan0
    iface wlan0 inet manual
    wpa-conf /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
    
    auto wlan1
    allow-hotplug wlan1
    iface wlan1 inet manual
    wpa-conf /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf

Additional information
=====================
The connection is through a Dlink Wireless Router using standard WEP security. There is no captive portal. Windows, Ubuntu and Kubuntu have all been using it successfully.