It won't. But not because this is desirable. All these anti-user measures are small and gradual steps that regular folks won't immediately recognize. Something about a frog and boiling water.
Beyond that, how many ordinary non-techie people are ever checking the actual changes of their app? I'd bet basically never unless a changelog page opens immediately after the update. And that's not exactly going to be worded in an understandable way like "we're doing this to screw over your ability to do what you want on the web".
The frog boiling analogy doesn't work long-term though, because humans don't live forever, and new ones keep replacing the old ones. A new crop of college kids is going to look at Chrome and say "nope"
Or the college kids are acclimated to the Google ecosystem because they been using Google Classroom on the Google Chromebooks in their K-12 classes for years.
Chromebooks happen to be a perfect example of a product that’s only ever used by people forced to, in this case by their school, as opposed to something people buy with their own money.