The government requested a judge to compel the company to offer its well-known Chrome browser in a location competitive case. Late on Wednesday, the Justice Department and a group of states requested that Google sell its well-known web browser, Chrome, in a move that may ultimately affect the$ 2 trillion company’s operations and alter online competitors. The plea came in response to a landmark ruling made by U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in August that determined that Google had unlawfully maintained an online dominance. By the end of Wednesday, Judge Mehta requested that the monopolistic case’s state and the Justice Department provide solutions to correct the research dominance. The government requested from Judge Mehta to decide whether to force Google to offer Android, its device operating system, or to forbid providing its services to phones that run Android. The government could compel Google to market Android at a later time if the terms were broken or the treatments failed to improve competitors. The government also requested in a comprehensive filing that the judge prevent Google from using paid subscriptions to replace Apple and other search engines on phones and sites. According to the government, the court may also order Google to permit foe search engines to get its data for ten years and show the company’s results. Since the Justice Department requested the dissolution of Microsoft in 2000, the proposals represent the most significant legal requests in a technical competitive case. The ideas, if Judge Mehta decides to accept them, may set the stage for a number of different antitrust lawsuits that challenge the power of tech behemoths like Apple, Amazon, and Meta. One of the worst possible results for Google would be being forced to sell both Chrome and Android. Chrome, which was introduced in 2008 and is free to apply, is the most popular web browser in the world, with an estimated 67 percent of the international website industry, according to Statcounter, which compiles it market information. Google’s search website is bundled into Chrome. The post information is retrievable with difficulty. In your browser’s settings, kindly help Browser. Thank you for your patience while exposure is verified. If you are in Audience mode please leave and log into your Times accounts, or listen for all of The Times. Thank you for your patience while accessibility is verified. Now a customer? Register in. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.