Thurrot.com
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and several U.S. states filed a set of proposed remedies in US v. Google late Wednesday, barely meeting the judge’s November 20 filing date. As rumored, the federal agency recommended that Google be forced to divest itself of its Chrome web browser to deprive the company of the primary distribution point of its antitrust abuses in Search and online advertising.
But the DOJ’s (and states’) recommendations go well beyond that.
The Department also recommends that Google be forced to divest itself of Android or make major behavior changes that prevent it from abusing its mobile OS; halt exclusionary agreements with Apple, Samsung, and others; allow third parties to access its search results and other data; make major changes to its advertising business; and make other changes.
Read more:

DOJ, States Formally Recommend a Google Breakup
The DOJ and several US states feel that the only way to fix Google's abuses is to force radical changes on the company.


DOJ: Google must sell Chrome web browser and open Search index for rivals
The DOJ has filed a court case against Google, urging the company to divest Chrome and potentially Android to curb anticompetitive practices.


DOJ’s staggering proposal would hurt consumers and America’s global technological leadership
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