Yes. Ghostery is much more targeted however, it blocks scripts based on a blacklist (of trackers) rather than blocking ALL scripts. Ghostery is much more user/non-techie friendly; the only time you need to mess with it is:
a) You want to allow some service (I allow disqus, for example): disable blocking for the service
b) A site requires facebook/twitter to log in, or you trust the site: whitelist the site (allows all tracking scripts)
I do wish it had a "allow by domain" so I could allow e.g. just facebook on just turntable.fm so I can log in, but not allow all of ttfn's other trackers.
Works fine on abc.com ;)
http://screencast.com/t/01D8EF6AH5ij