It's really akin to double-pane insulated window glass, which has been building code in northern climates for many years. My home is 20 years old, and over the past 10 years, one by one, the windows fail; they fail by having the seals break. (We replace the panes as they fail.) The breaking of the seal is the breaking of the adhesive bond between the glass and the aluminum frame. You cannot see the break--usually it is microscopic. When new the glass was hermetically (impervious to gas or air motion) sealed to the frame.
How do you discover the break? Well, moisture laden air migrates through this microscopic seal break, and when it gets cold out, you get condensation on the inside of the glass. So, when ever it gets well below freezing in February, I'm on the hunt around the house for the broken seals, mark them, and replace the panes in spring time.
Yes, we may have small seals between the glass, bezel, and instrument, and we may even have a rubber seal on the back of the instrument where the cable gets in. But it is not a hermetic seal, and sure as shooting, moist air will get in.
The condensation will rear its ugly head in places like Florida, with vast amounts of humidity, and some wild temperature swings with dew points during certain seasons. Not likely to see this in Arizona. I don't have the issue at all in Michigan on the instruments, but then again this is not likely to occur just in summer here!