In the google voice python implementation I came across this as well, their use was during a function call. The parameters are defaulted to "None" and then when the function is called they can check if the values are changed or the default.
I.E.
def login (user=None, password=None)
if user is None:
user = input('Please enter your username');
...
return <something>;
called by
login()
OR
login(user='cool_dude')
OR
any combination of user/password you wish.
Additionally your "update" of the logic implies that variable == true or false. That is not correct for all cases (it may work in some cases but I'm throwing them out, since it's not a general case). What you are testing by using the "NONE" logic is whether the variable contains anything besides NONE. Similar to what I was saying above, all the "login function" was doing was determining if the user passed anything, not whether the value was valid, true, etc.