You will obviously have a change management system which describes all the changes you have made to your putative standard distro configs. You will also be monitoring those changes.
This tool logs all the changes it makes via the standard logging system, which can be easily captured, shipped and aggregated and then queried and reported on.
This is not a tool from Clown Cars R US, it's from a reasonably reputable source - Oracle (lol etc). Even better, you can read the code and learn or critique.
Not being funny but I'd rather this sort of thing by far than any amount of wooo handwavy wankery. Would you prefer openly described and documented or "take our word for it"?
Which is now a list you will have to check for every issue. I don't think they are complaining they don't trust the writers of the code, just that it adds confounding variables to your system
Only if you don't know what you're doing, which, with no judgement whatsoever, might be true for OP. Reading the source, it affects some networking related flags. If the local audio craps out, it's not related. If the Bluetooth keyboard craps out, it's not related. If the hard drive crashes, it's not related.
I get that is just adding more variables to the system, but this isn't Windows, where the changes under the hood are this mystery hotfix that got applied and we have no idea what it did and the vendor notes raise more questions than it asks and your computer working feels like this house of cards that's gonna fall over if you look at it funny. If the system is acting funny, just disable this, reset them all back to default, possibly by rebooting, and see if the problem persists. If you're technical enough to install this, I don't think disabling it and rebooting is beyond your abilities.