The whole purpose of most EULAs is to take away the rights you normally would have under copyright. They even go further than you might think. I consider many of these to be abuse of copyright and unenforceable. Copyright was meant to foster creation of works, not this.
If you wonder whether a EULA goes too far, just think about it being applied to a book you bought. Would you have to get prior approval from the publisher for a review? You can’t loan a book to a friend, sell it, or trade it in at a used book store for credit? The book is tied to your home, and you lose the right to that book if you move? Do they have a mechanism to remotely destroy your book, and make it against the EULA to protect your book from said destruction? Can they force you to destroy your book if you violated any of these terms?
If any of that doesn’t sound right to you, then you have a problem with most EULAs.
I’m just saying that it doesn’t impact the average user. I see DMCA impacting the average user, though...