Meanwhile, I doubt you believe the need for a password makes your ATM "harder" to use. You are confusing things: With an ATM you _do_ have the risk of someone standing in front of the ATM that is not trusted. As a result, passwords are necessary. With a PC at somebody's home you very often do not have
Yes, I think auto login is a nice *feature* Password protection is the feature, not auto login. You need lots of additional programs and infrastructure for password protection, auto login needs nothing. Think of MS DOS, did that have an auto login
Carl Hartung wrote: the risk of local attacks. E.g. many video recorders/TVs have _optional_ passwords that can be activated to prevent the kids messing with it. However, this password function is by default _de_activated (=auto login), since in most cases the there is no "attacker". Hence password protection is unnecessary and would make the video recorder/TV harder to use than necessary. Or how would you like to enter a password every time you switch on your TV? Password protected fridges, anyone? After all, these could get raided as well. The same argument goes for your PC at home(which for many users is not more than a TV + telephone + gaming console): If there is no attacker, you do not need a defense! program? Maybe you should see auto login more as the removal of an _unnecessary_ feature...
but it should be a feature that requires a bit of knowledge forethought and effort to enable Auto login is aimed at the non-technical users, so making it hard to use makes it useless. Btw, a good distribution should _reduce_ the effort it takes to do things, not increase it. And maybe include a few warning signs for the unwary. But with auto login you do not need to be a computer expert to see the security implications.
Regards nordi