There are around a half dozen DuraSpark ICMs. They are identified by the color of their grommet where the wires meet the case as well as part numbers.
There are at least Black, Green, Blue, Red, and two Yellows. They all (may) have slightly different connectors. One version of the Yellow box had three connectors.
AMC used the three-connector Yellow box in 1982, all other years used the Blue box.
Ford used a red box on CA cars and some others for many years. It used a coil without a resistor to reduce the chance of misfire, it could produce a hotter spark. It achieved this with a change to its internal electronics where it measured coil saturation and could limit current rather than using a resistor wire to limit current to the coil. (Notice I didn't mention Voltage anywhere.)
The Red box included a safety feature, if the engine stalled out the box would shut down until it received a start signal. This way the engine couldn't fire up if it were accidentally left in Run.
The Blue box didn't initially include this feature, but I can make no promises it wasn't included in later part numbers, nor can I say that any aftermarket box doesn't do this. Ford did make changes to parts as they were being made and changed part numbers slightly to reflect this.
In any case no stock vehicle would ever care and few would consider this a design flaw.
Incidentally, the yellow box used the third connector to allow the computer to retard spark instead of the later method of the computer pretending to be the distributor and sending the timing signal to the ICM. If that third connector is shorted it should act just like a Blue box.