I have, many times, for both work and personal use. I'm of the same opinion as
@hayden. Many have links to other documents that include further rights for them. Almost all include the rights to sell any and all of your information to anybody that they might care to do so for pretty much any purpose, up to the limit of the law, and sometimes beyond if the agreement has not been appropriately modified for end user location. Europe and California come to mind.
My favorite was one EULA that included the rights to your first born male son, or his earnings. They caught a lot of press for it, and at the time, it wasn't clear what their intent was.
Despite being boilerplate, companies have historically prevailed in their rights in EULA. In almost all cases, you are not getting ownership, you are getting a usage right, that may be terminated.
Then you have Facebook's creation of shadow profiles of non-users, based on using information from Facebook's current users. So far, there hasn't been a legal precedent to delete the shadow profiles data.
Facebook shadow profiles are data collections that include information about users that they did not provide.
umatechnology.org
“Can someone who does not have a Facebook account opt out of data collection?”
www.theverge.com
Personally, I think that if someone has EULA concerns, that they shouldn't be using the software in question. The EULA coverage is generally very broad, in my purely non-legal, amateur opinion, and should not be relied upon.
All the best,
Peter