I don't think its power abuse we're seeing here. Its more like the Dunning–Kruger effect.
These young'uns have learned enough to grok a tittle of what it takes to be a successful software engineer and think "This is easy!" since the majority of people who started on the CS track dropped back to a business major after they got stumped on the first "Hello World" program.
The arrogance will subside in time, once you're forced into a world where your cafeteria card requires funding and your student loans must now be paid...
But you'll still be paying your cable company - since I'm sure thats where your internet access comes from...
True - but look at the end user agreement for the software.
You don't own it.
The less time planning, the more time programming.