You have to actually understand the methodology and not simply quote-mine Wikipedia and Berkeley.
Cladistics does not identify "shared derived traits" between major taxa groups. This is a metaphysical statement about evolutionary ancestry and is found nowhere in the data. Cladists will simply tend to group organisms by the highest levels of similarity. Discordant similarity will be rationalized as being "convergent".
Take Megabats for example. Because Megabat eye/brain anatomy were found to be more similar to Primates than Microbats, some Cladists had trouble resolving whether those features were "shared derived traits" and the Megabat wings "convergently evolved" separately from Microbats, or vise versa. (bat wings are "shared derived traits" and the primate-like eye/brain anatomy "convergently evolved")
This led to the proposal of a "Flying Primate Theory"
We flightless primates Tetrapod Zoology
The point is, in cladistics, there is no magic label that absolutely identifies a "shared derived trait", It's something the evolutionist must infer from the data and is often completely subjective.
This is the danger of simply accepting what Evolutionists tell you as a fact, because they will not advertise the copious amounts of subjective rationalizations that go into their claims.