Well, At least it isn't MS this time.
I object to the EULA in principle.
When I go into a store and say to the clerk "I would like to buy a copy of that program" they sell it to me with there being no mention of it being merely licensed. The receipt is just a bill of sale with nothing to indicate a license has changed hands. I doubt very much they have negotiated a deal with the software company to act as their agents and as such they don't have the legal standing to
sell a license. I doubt that at any step between myself and the publisher there is even any mention of the software being licensed not sold. Without that explicit chain of people authorized to sell licenses I doubt the validity of the EULA under contract law.
I see no reason that software unlike other copyrighted material should have the rights that software publisher take for themselves. Specifically the right to limit the way you use the product you buy.
What do you think the courts would say if upon entering your newly purchased house a EULA popped up with the type of restriction commonly placed on software in it? Especially the "This House is merely licensed you may not sell or transfer the license". restriction. So why is software different? (Note house designs are commonly copyrighted so you CANNOT make an exact copy of most newer houses without permission of the copyright holder).