Unless i'm stupid can someone tell me how having the information they gathered about you can get you unbanned ?
First of all, we don't know what information they have on us. That is just speculation.
Secondly. Stop quoting the EULA and ToS, we all have access to it and most have read it (like I said in my previous reply to you, I was just waiting for you to completely ignore what I wrote and copy/paste old news instead). There is no point in quoting the EULA or ToS in this matter. I don't know where you are located, but in countries that do not have a common law system, a ToS cannot override any applicable, non-amendable laws and consumer rights, as long as the contract is between a private individual and a business. We wouldn't even have such laws if they could be overriden. A ToS can only outline the finer, product specific details that is obviously not covered by the law, but it's an addition to the law and is only valid when it is not in conflict with it. As I've mention before, it is not illegal to demand that you sign an invalid EULA or ToS, but it wouldn't hold in court. In such a case, it's not uncommon that the license issuer will quietly compensate you in some way, to avoid having to take it to court. It's a matter of money, and if few enough dispute it and enough people believe it to be valid, that's the cheaper option.
As I pointed out in a previous post, you are engaged in a commercial agreement with Blizzard. You gave Blizzard your money in exchange for a service. Blizzard claim you are in breach of contract, stops the service, keeps your money, but refuse to pass the evidence or even describe to you what you have done in a way that eventually enables you to dispute the claim. This violates your right according to the law, and to me also by all morale standards I can relate to. If Blizzard fail to document in what way you were in breach of contract, in such a way that you have a chance of defending yourself, there has been no breach of contract because they can't or don't want to prove it. Hence they need to restore your account or blatantly violate the law and risk enormous fees.
My assertion is that they are doing this because they have some evidence that the software ran on the computer. However, I don't think they have enough evidence to link you or your account directly to the breach of contract, so they are trying to bully people into accepting it. In this matter, you are doing exactly what they want people to do, not understanding their rights, and you even advocate not understanding those rights and acting upon them. If took it to court, they will not win if the suspension was based upon general detection of the software, without any proof in-game that you actually ran the bot to perform anything. This is vital, because your minor might installed software, or a friend, without your knowing, or you logged in to WoW on a compromised computer at someone else's house or even a public computer.
This got much longer than I planned to write, but at least I've spoon fed you what I wrote previously, with step by step reasoning.
I don't know what legal experience you have, but I have been working with software licenses and contracts for about 15 years, and also been engaged in both the EFF in the US and the local version of it in my own country for 10 years.