Thanks for your example. What is your browser? Yes the result shows, that your browser does good efforts to block trackers. And when some of the identifying bits are spoofed (and therefore inconsistant) there is even low probability, someone could fingerprint you.
But also important to know is that fingerprinting is a cat and mouse game. Trackers can improve. Lets say they could track your typing behaviour together with how you move your mouse, thay maby already can track you accurately.
In deviceinfo.me you can see if these data are readable to a website you visite.
But this has to be seen rather as a second line of defense. Since when trackers are blocked, they should not even be requested to send their malicious code within your browser. So more protection is rather for extra paranoid users.