Hardly a surprise when you consider that the only option if you don't agree is to not install the software. It seems that EULAs are whatever the authors want them to be unless they are challenged in the courts.
Which is why Adware companies love proprietary software People just blindly agree with the terms, it's perfect for them. Well, if a software goes on court then it's likely not going to survive for long. Unless it's Microsoft.
EULAs have rapidly become bloated and almost unreadable , which serves the interests of their creators just fine . Somebody please correct me if I'm wrong , but I think MS have set a new "world standard " with the W10 EULA. There's around 48 pages of it .... and it is a welter of inane , mindless blather .... with a checkbox at the end . But buried in there are the "quicksand" clauses ..... the one's that give away your ownership of everything on a W10 system.