I still found it insane to display passwords that easily. Sometimes I give brief access to my PC to friends, family, acquaintances, or even colleagues, and they shouldn't be able to see my passwords with a simple button. It's like leaving your bike out unlocked, because someone with the right tools can break the locks anyway.

> It's like leaving your bike out unlocked, because someone with the right tools can break the locks anyway.

Not to strain the analogy, but it's more like not locking your bike when it's in your locked apartment (the apartment being your computer). The thought being that if someone puts the time and effort into breaking into your apartment, a bike lock isn't going to do anything to stop them.

I think it makes perfect sense. I want to see my passwords without having to re-enter my system password every time.

Operating systems have had guest accounts for decades for the "handing your PC to friends/family/etc." use case. Even Android phones have temporary guest accounts (though many manufacturers disable that because it interferes with their own secondary user-based hacks).

Guest accounts are a nice theory that do not match the lived practice of scenarios such as "Yeah sure, go to the PC to add some songs to the playlist".