Highly Visible Password

When passwords are being entered, they're always displayed on screen in plain text, rather than asterisked out. Why? So you can see how clever either the characters or the writers are being; often it being some kind of reference or pun.

Part of the office-variety Viewer-Friendly Interface.

In a futuristic setting, the password may even be spoken to the computer. In the future, nobody minds if the Bridge Bunnies know The Captain's security codes, especially since computers at that point will be smart enough to also make sure the code is spoken by the correct voice.

Compare The Password Is Always Swordfish, Password Slot Machine. Often lends itself to Override Command. Not to be confused with the popularity of a certain game show.

Comedy

 * Taken to ridiculous extremes in this episode of Jinnai Tomonori's series.

Comics

 * In the Watchmen comic, not only does the password show up on the screen, the computer helpfully informs the person breaking into the system that the password is incomplete. Hey, it was The Eighties, it was a simpler, more naive time; you don't know things didn't work that way then. There's also a theory that the owner of the computer wanted the security to be bypassed, as it leads the hackers out of the area before Something Very Bad happens.

Films

 * War Games has a Highly Visible Password typed in a terminal program. In most real-life command line programs, a password simply won't show up at all rather than showing up either as plain text or as asterisks. This can be irritating if you don't realize you've made a typo because you can't see that there's one extra asterisk.
 * Strange inversion in the Death Note movie: the username is asterisked out while the password is highly visible. Some Real Life systems actually work that way.
 * Happened in Batman Forever.
 * Also with Alfred's disc in Batman and Robin
 * Taken to its extreme in The Incredibles. Not only does Syndrome's computer display the password, but his monitor is the size of an IMAX screen and the letters are several feet tall.
 * In the Bibi Blocksberg movie, Rafea uses a spell to make the password of Mr. Blocksberg's computer a highly visible one.

Live Action TV

 * Happens in Heroes when Mohinder's trying to guess his father's password.
 * Ditto when Elle was trying to get into her father's computer
 * All versions of Star Trek have the "say the password aloud" version of this trope. Presumably they are checking for voice matches too, but a few episodes have shown that the computer can be fooled by a recording of the officer in question saying the password.
 * In an episode of Scrubs Ted asks JD not to watch him type his password...then says it aloud as he's typing it (it's "alligator3").
 * In the episode of Sherlock A Scandal in Belgravia, Sherlock deduces that that the password on a smartphone that reads "I am locked" (with a four letter space for typing the password above the word "locked") must be "Sher", so as to cause the smartphone to displays the text "I am Sher-locked.

Video Games

 * In the game Second Sight the player can access computer terminals. If the terminal needs a password and the player doesn't know it then John Vattic (the Main Character) keeps entering generic passwords, which the player can see on the screen.
 * In the game Fallout 3, when a player attempts to hack a computer, not only does the computer conveniently provide a list of possible passwords, it also tells you how many letters are correct and in the right place.
 * Ironically the password is asterisked when you type it (i.e. when you know it).
 * Every time you encounter a keypad locked door in one of the Crusader games, there will be a computer nearby with an email on the screen reading something to the effect of "In accordance to our security regulations, the access code to the lab has changed. The new code is 349".
 * In Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory there is not so much a highly visible password as a highly audible one. A guard will be having an argument with someone over the phone within earshot of the player. When the player starts listening in, the topic has changed to the dangers of speaking a door code out loud. The frustrated guard will then shout out the door code repeatedly to prove that nobody is listening in.

Western Animation

 * Code Lyoko gives us the referential type: when Jérémie is first prompted for an access code for Sector 5 (codenamed "Carthage"), we're treated to a series of dropped names from the Punic Wars before he finally gains access with "SCIPIO" (Scipio Romanus, the guy who eventually conquered Carthage).

Real Life

 * The initial version of the Wii's Internet Browser used an on screen keyboard that showed you what you were typing, no matter what kind of field you were typing it in. The latest version will display asterisks if you are filling in a password field, but that's only if you aren't using the word completer.
 * That said, just try and input a password into a field using the screen's keyboard (ie, not plugging in a keyboard into a USB port) with someone in the room and do so without them figuring out what it is. I'll wait. Also, linking your Wii Shop Channel account to your Club Nintendo account requires a password which isn't masked in any way.
 * Same thing for the PlayStation 3's onscreen keyboard
 * The iPod Touch and iPhone display the most recently typed letter of the password, with the rest being dots. For instance, if you're typing "trope", it will appear as t, * r, ** o, *** p, **** e, ***** . Not a bug but an Anti Frustration Feature, as the tiny on-screen keyboard makes it very easy to hit the wrong key, and if it was all dots there'd be no way to know you'd done it until your login was refused.
 * The DSi's web browser and the Blackberry Storm 9500 do that too for the exact same reason (and probably all touch screen device).
 * Some versions of the Palm also did this. Stories abound of people making their passwords all asterisks to fool shoulder snoopers.
 * Android does this if the "Visible passwords" option is turned on.
 * There's a Firefox extension called "Show my Password" that does this, for people who are annoyed by their passwords being hidden on computers located in their own homes where no one could possibly be spying on them. This is not as true as they'd like to think, at least if you're important enough to spy on.
 * Fridge Logic: if you are important enough to spy on, aren't you important enough to have a keylogger put into your computer? (Given that one of these can be done remotely...)
 * The "remember my password on this computer" function can have a similar effect. Hilarity Ensues whenever someone uses this for something critical without bothering to set a login password for their PC, and it gets stolen.
 * And then there's folks who think that passwords should not be masked by default anyway.
 * The first computer hackers, mostly found at MIT in the late 50s / early 60s, believed there shouldn't be passwords at all—everybody should have access to everybody's files—yes, even write access! They managed to keep that ideology in place in university computers for a surprisingly long time. Read all about those folks in this book.
 * Some command line programs (like the MySQL client) still have ways of entering the password in the clear.
 * In one of the more boneheaded examples of this trope, a recent update to a popular VPN program requires the user to enter the password by clicking on a huge on-screen keyboard. With the positions of the keys randomized, to slow you down while you search for where the A key is this time so that the person sitting next to you has plenty of time to jot down your password. The password itself is masked, presumably because it makes the joke funnier that way.