I'll add one piece of info. to the discussion:
A few years ago, I remarked on an automotive forum that it puzzled me that consumer lawnmower engines definitely have a lot of problems with old 10% ethanol fuel, but cars did not.
A guy who frequented that forum and that worked on the technical side of the trucking industry solved the mystery. He said that the difference was that fuel systems of automobiles are required to be sealed, whereas the fuel systems of lawnmowers and most other small-engine devices were not sealed - i.e, were freely vented to atmosphere. Not only does that passively expose the fuel to air and moisture, but as ambient temperatures rose and fell routinely through night-time/day-time cycles, the gas tank "breathed" fresh air and moisture in and out as the air expanded and contracted with the daily temperature fluctuations - bringing a fresh batch of moisture into the tank every day to react with the ethanol in the fuel. Car fuel systems being sealed, they don't get a new batch of air and moisture constantly being pushed in and out of the tank.
That goes right along with what some of you said about moisture and ethanol interaction. But for me, it explained in particular why lawnmowers and other smaller engine devices don't tolerate aged ethanol fuel, whereas old ethanol fuel doesn't seem to bother running/starting quality of cars.