Companies have one main motivation here: to minimize their legal risks. So they use these blanket, generic NDAs that maximize their legal protections and options, and minimize yours. Most of the time, it's not predatory, just them maxing out the legal strength of their position.
Things you should absolutely do:
- Read every word of every legal agreement you sign with a prospective employer.
- Ask upfront if working on certain projects would be okay. If so, ask for exemption language in your NDA.
I did exactly this for a side project, unrelated to my day job. My employer redrafted my NDA to give me legal protection -- because they saw that the project in no way mattered to them, and also because they saw me as a good programmer and wanted to keep me happy.
In reality, if your side project has zero prospect of competing with the intellectual property of your employer (e.g. "web programming" vs "video card drivers"), then your employer shouldn't mind extending a little legal reassurance for your situation.
Also bear in mind there is a huge difference in the business world between having a legal agreement and also interpretating and enforcing that legal agreement. Companies "posture" all the time, make legal threats and even file lawsuits not because they genuinely think they're in the right, but because they're making a tactical move (e.g. "he probably can't afford to respond to the lawsuit, and will thus be willing to settle with us"). Think patent lawsuits.