If you use the $({-}{+}{+}{+})$ sign convention then $ds$ is the proper distance between two infinitesimally separated points; if you use the $({+}{-}{-}{-})$ convention then it's the proper time. In each case, if you choose points whose separation is such that the proper distance (respectively, proper time) is not meaningful then $ds$ will become imaginary.
On purely aesthetic grounds, I've always felt that proper time is more fundamental than proper distance, since it has a direct physical effect and can measured, while proper distance must be inferred. From that perspective I find it nicer to use the $({+}{-}{-}{-})$ convention and think of $ds$ as an interval of proper time, which becomes imaginary if no particle can travel along the path in question.
But from the point of view of actually doing calculations, none of this matters. $ds$ always appears in its squared form, so whichever sign convention you choose, if you're bothered by the idea of an imaginary time or an imaginary distance you can avoid it by treating $ds^2$ rather than $ds$ as the fundamental quantity. Neither the choice of sign convention nor the choice of how to interpret $ds^2$ changes the result of any calculation, so they make identical physical predictions and are ultimately both matters of taste.