A lot of the discussion of EAC revolves around the mis-perception that (good) ripping engines somehow get it wrong all the time. There are some alternative rippers that do a reliable job of ripping CDs without noticeable scratches. When I say "reliable" I mean they rip CDs without noticeable scratches 100% correctly down to the last bit.
This is based on my own tests of repeat cdparanoia rips done on different machines and CD/DVD ROM drives rather than any theoretical 'received wisdom'. If someone else has some other experience, fine. I'm just giving you my experience based on bit-wise comparisons.
The question then comes, what if I have a noticeably scratched disc? If cdparanoia cannot get the data off accurately...then I doubt EAC will despite trying over and over. EAC WILL be in a position to notify me of an error. The fact is cdparanoia (and cdparanoia-based rippers which are available on all platforms) do a darn good job. Unlike some, and especially older, audio CD transports.
Also, I think people overestimate seriously the effect of being unable to read a few samples with certainty in 700Mb of data (in the case of some visibly scratched discs). That is likely not audible. There are so many bigger fish to fry it's not funny.
So to people who like to use EAC I say good call...knowing you got the rip right can't be bad can it? To people who insist EAC is the only choice, relax (or stress about other things?

) there exist alternative rippers which perform reliably in practice.
Darren