This is not really an answer, but rather a meta-answer as to why there exist many conventions in the first place.

The symmetric monoidal category $\mathit{sVect}$ of super-vector spaces has an interesting autoequivalence $J$.
The symmetric monoidal functor $J:\mathit{sVect}\to \mathit{sVect}$ is the identity at the level of objects and at the level of morphisms.
But the coherence $J(V \otimes W) \xrightarrow{\cong} J(V) \otimes J(W)$ is non-trivial. It is given by $-1$ on $V_{odd} \otimes W_{odd}$ and $+1$ on the rest.

>The image of $\mathit{Cliff}(V,q)$ under $J$ is $\mathit{Cliff}(V,-q)$.
So anything that you do with one convention can equally well be done with the other convention.

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When the ground field is $\mathbb C$, the symmetric monoidal functor $J:\mathit{sVect}\to \mathit{sVect}$ is equivalent to the identity symmetric monoidal functor.
The symmetric monoidal natural transformation $Id\Rightarrow J$ that exhibits the equivalence acts as $i$ on the odd part and as $1$ on the even part of any super-vector space.

Over the reals, $J$ is not equivalent to the identity functor, as can be seen from the fact that $\mathit{Cliff}(\mathbb R,|\cdot|^2)\not\simeq\mathit{Cliff}(\mathbb R,-|\cdot|^2)$.

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Now, as far as practical things are concerned, I would recommend minimizing the number of minus signs that you end up writing down.