Planned obsolescence needs to be made illegal. Not that that would stop companies from doing it anyway. To be honest, nothing seems to stop companies from doing whatever the hell they want whether it's legal or not.
The whole EULA thing is a scam that software companies came up with years ago. According to the law you have to agree to the contract at the time of purchase, not the time of installation. How many times have you been asked to agree to an EULA when you go to the cash register to purchase a piece of software or game? Never? Well then when you're forced to agree to it later, the software company is breaking the law. They're not allowed to throw new terms and conditions at you after the point of purchase. If you didn't agree to it then, you don't have to agree to it later.
However... who here has the money to fight a protracted battle in court over it? So really the only reason it's 'legal', and I use that term extremely loosely, is because no one has the power or money to get it thrown out in court. More or less it's extortion through manipulation of the legal system. And until the law changes all EULA contracts that you agree to after the point of purchase are illegal no matter what MicroScam or whoever else might tell you.
To be honest I read somewhere that upwards of 90%+ of all contracts are illegal in some way or other, it's just that the people getting screwed by them are usually unable to fight them in court due to insufficient knowledge or simply being out powered.