Exactly!
The problem with the Tek way is that if you're just probing around a circuit, you have to wait for the auto timeout, and it's not immediately clear whether the pin is really oscillating or it's at a steady level, you have to wait. On the Agilent you can see right away if the signal's high or low, or whatever voltage it might be, as well as whether it's oscillating right away.
This has been covered before.
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/blog/eevblog-617-tektronix-oscilloscope-anomaly/I also did a very short vid comparing a Keysight 7000, Rigol MSO1074Z, Tek TDS2024 and a Tek MDO3000 in Auto.
What is more confusing is what the "enhancement" is on the X 4000 and X 6000, I am not sure how you can cover both options, although I could see that you could choose one auto mode over another.
It's not a bug as far as I am concerned, it's the way it works. Martin may think it's a bug, I don't, and I personally prefer the Agilent way for the reason stated, and I've only started using Agilent/Keysight scopes in the past 18 months having been a Tek man most of my career.
Edit: typos, bloody tablets.