I think this is putting the cart before the horse. There are lots of technologies that allow one to search for information: physical libraries, online libraries, general search engines, specialized search engines like google scholar, etc. If someone chooses not to learn to use the ones he needs, that's not the fault of the existence of other tools.
For the past two years, I have told students that unless they have specific permission, they may not have a phone in front of them or a computer turned on in class. I am not the only one who is doing this. I did it for several reasons. Some learned less because the computer made it easy to distract themselves when their attention wandered. Some students complained that they were distracted by other students' computers. The class that prompted me had computers open all the time, and their performance made it clear that their attention was wandering. And there is now some solid research indicating that in at least some contexts, students learn less if they take notes on a computer. The total number of students who have complained about this is exactly zero. I pass out hard copies of my slides at the beginning of class, and they end up writing notes by hand on those and--get this--sticking them into old-fashioned three ring binders, which wasn't my suggestion. They find flipping through the notebooks an effective way to review. My point is that they adapted, and they did so nearly instantly. Give people a good reason to learn to use a tool and don't help them avoid learning it--don't give them an alternative "path of least resistance"--and most will learn it.
Consistent with that, when people post a question here that requires a long answer, and that long answer is provided in very clear form in the tutorials section, I point them to the right tutorial and tell them to ask me questions afterwards. Some then vanish into the ether, but some read and learn.