WebProNews

Tag: Videos

  • RoboCop Gets an Honest Trailer (The Original, Not the Unnecessary Remake)

    The only remake that’s more unnecessary than Spike Lee’s completely pointless box-office-bomb rehash of Oldboy is the upcoming remake of Paul Verhoeven’s violent classic RoboCop. Nothing against the new RoboCop’s director José Padilha, but he’s basically opening up a collector’s edition RoboCop DVD (you know, that cool metal one), pooping directly on the disc, closing it back up, and mailing it to Peter Weller.

    Like many great sci-fi films, RoboCop asks us to think about what it means to be human. It just accomplishes this with some of the most extraordinarily over-the-top, blood-soaked violence in cinema history – and that’s part of what makes it so endearing.

    It’s exactly what’s going to be absent from the 2014 remake, which has been given a PG-13 rating. You can’t make a RoboCop movie suitable for young kids. A RoboCop movie that your 11-year-old daughter wants to see is a shitty RoboCop movie. End of argument.

    So, instead of taking your kids to see the most disheartening remake of 2014, have them watch this honest trailer. If they don’t want to watch the 1987 RoboCop after this, well, it’s time to think about adoption.

    Image via YouTube

  • Watch Bill Gates Play Chess, Get Destroyed in About a Minute

    You gotta have some smarts to become the richest man in the world – and of course, nobody is doubting the intellect of Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates.

    But being smart, successful, and wealthy doesn’t necessarily make you a good chess player. Being a great chess player comes from natural ability and a lot of practice.

    Enter Norwegian chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen. In just under one minute and 20 seconds, Carlsen disposes of Gates. I mean, you can tell that Carlsen would have beaten him even faster if Gates were a quicker player. You can’t win ’em all, Billy.

    Gates shouldn’t feel too bad about his beatdown. Carlsen is currently the #1 ranked player in the world, and owns the highest peak rating in history at 2872. He became a chess grandmaster as the ripe old age of 13.

    Image, Video via NRK, YouTube

  • Don’t Know Jack About Football? This Animation Should Help

    For many people, the Super Bowl is a chance to stuff your face with delicious but artery-clogging delicacies and check out some unusually funny commercials – and that’s about it. If that describes you, well, how about you give football a try?

    Ok, I know – some people just don’t like football and that’s never going to change. But if you’re thinking about actually paying attention to the game this year (or at least thinking about making an attempt) – here comes a clever little animation to help you better understand the chaos.

    No, this 3-minute explanation of American Football won’t teach you about offensive play calling, defensive schemes, or oft-forgotten rules. But what it will do is give the football virgin a decent idea about what’s happening on-screen.

    Oh, so you know football? You’re an everyday John Madden? Ok, well, watch it anyway – it’s rather enjoyable.

    Video and Image via Fraser Davidson, YouTube

  • Police Catch Florida Man’s Texting & Driving Crash on Video

    Texting while driving is stupid, reckless, dangerous, and an all around dick move. Everybody knows this, but the majority of adults continue to do it. Why? Well, why does anybody do anything, really? I’m going to go with selfishness, as opposed to stupidity. You can fix selfishness.

    Every week it seems there’s a new story about some distracted driver doing something stupid. Whether it’s a texting driver running straight into a trailer full of crap, someone crashing their car into a lake, or someone plowing into a herd of cattle, the examples all demonstrate the simple truth that you can’t really multitask when it comes to driving. It’s something that requires all of your attention.

    Today’s example comes with an added bonus – the police actually caught it on dashcam.

    We go to Fort Myers, Florida, where it appears that Florida Man is at it again. Watch below as Michael Woody learns the dangers of texting while driving first hand:

    Luckily for Mr. Woody, he was able to crawl out unscathed. According to police, Woody admitted that texting is what led to his erratic driving. He was cited for careless driving and texting while driving (Florida’s new ban on the practice just went into effect a few months ago).

    And luckily for Google, Mr. Woody was simply texting and not wearing Google Glass when he ran off the road and flipped his car over – they surely don’t need the bad press.

    Image and video via WFLA

  • Watch This Creepy Animatronic Devil Baby Freak Out Some New Yorkers

    This “viral” prank is part of a marketing stunt for the new film Devil’s Due, set to open this Friday. I’ll just get that out of the way. That by no means makes it any less funny, however.

    Take a super creepy animatronic baby, build it into a remote-controlled stroller, and set it loose on the streets of New York City. How could this not be fun?

    There’s nothing quite like scaring the absolute shit out of people. As one YouTuber writes,

    “This video needs to be 10 minutes long.”

    You gotta appreciate viral marketing done right.

    Image via DevilsDueNYC, YouTube

  • What If Famous Directors Tackled Christmas Morning?

    If you’ve ever taken a film criticism class, you’re familiar with the Auteur Theory. At its core, it states that films are a manifestation of the director (or “auteur”) and his/her creative vision, and despite all of the other things that go into the making of a film, the director is the primary “auteur.” You know, a Tarantino film is a Tarantino film – you just know it when you see it.

    As a film lover, this videos makes me so happy. Part of the joy of movies is celebrating famous filmmakers’ stylistic peculiarities, and if you get a kick out of Fourgrounds Media’s The Auteurs of Christmas – well, good. That means that you’ve watched enough important films to get the jokes.

    Bonus points for the Von Trier segment. That was f’ing perfect.

    Image via Fourgroundsmediainc, YouTube and h/t to Digg

  • Facebook Introduces App Center Videos

    Facebook Introduces App Center Videos

    In May of last year, Facebook entered the mobile scene in a big way with App Center. It was a centralized location where mobile users could find their way to mobile apps from Facebook. Since its introduction, Facebook has touted some big numbers from App Center and is now aiming to get even bigger numbers with a significant update.

    Facebook announced today that developers can now embed videos on their App Center pages. The social network says that video will help developers better illustrate their game to prospective players. After all, screenshots can only tell a player so much. With video, developers can give a much better look at how their game works and how it’s played.

    So, how does this App Center Video thing work? Simple – you just submit your videos to the Facebook App Dashboard under the App Details tab. Just like with images, Facebook will have to approve every video submitted. Once approved, it should show up on your app page for all to enjoy.

    Oh, and Facebook will allow developers to upload multiple videos for multiple languages. A video in English would be rather ineffective for a Spanish speaking audience so you might just want to localize your app video into their native tongue. If you need help with that, there are multiple resources services available, including Google’s own Android App Translation Service.

    For more info, here’s a video about this new option available to developers:

    Image via ChronoBlade/App Center

  • Roku Gets a YouTube Channel, Complete with HD Streaming and ‘Send to TV’ Feature

    Roku Gets a YouTube Channel, Complete with HD Streaming and ‘Send to TV’ Feature

    Roku is the latest set-top device to get a YouTube app. Starting today, Roku 3 owners in the US, UK, Canada, and the Republic of Ireland can now stream YouTube videos on the big screen with their device – in HD when applicable.

    You can also shoot videos from your phone to your TV via Roku.

    “Control YouTube on Roku from that sick new phone you just got, turning your TV into your personal JumboTron. Just connect your device to the same Wi-Fi as your Roku,” says YouTube’s Sarah Ali.

    Roku began to let users stream video to their TVs from their mobile devices back in August.

    “The YouTube channel rounds out our industry-leading selection of streaming entertainment just in time for the holidays and the annual year-end best-of video lists like YouTube’s own list of top trending videos released last week. Whether it’s finding a helpful tutorial, listening to the latest music, or watching your favorite videos for hours on end, YouTube has something for everyone and today we couldn’t be more pleased to announce the launch of this much-anticipated channel on our platform,” says Roku’s Ed Lee.

    This isn’t the only new content app to hit Roku in recent memory – just last month Roku added the popular WatchESPN and WATCH Disney apps to their lineup.

    Image via Roku Blog

  • Google Gives Advice On Speedier Penalty Recovery

    Google has shared some advice in a new Webmaster Help video about recovering from Google penalties that you have incurred as the result of a time period of spammy links.

    Now, as we’ve seen, sometimes this happens to a company unintentionally. A business could have hired the wrong person/people to do their SEO work, and gotten their site banished from Google, without even realizing they were doing anything wrong. Remember when Google had to penalize its own Chrome landing page because a third-party firm bent the rules on its behalf?

    Google is cautiously suggesting “radical” actions from webmasters, and sending a bit of a mixed message.

    How far would you go to get back in Google’s good graces? How important is Google to your business’ survival? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    The company’s head of webspam, Matt Cutts, took on the following question:

    How did Interflora turn their ban in 11 days? Can you explain what kind of penalty they had, how did they fix it, as some of us have spent months try[ing] to clean things up after an unclear GWT notification.

    As you may recall, Interflora, a major UK flowers site, was hit with a Google penalty early this year. Google didn’t exactly call out the company publicly, but after reports of the penalty came out, the company mysteriously wrote a blog post warning people not to engage in the buying and selling of links.

    But you don’t have to buy and sell links to get hit with a Google penalty for webspam, and Cutts’ response goes beyond that. He declines to discuss a specific company because that’s not typically not Google’s style, but proceeds to try and answer the question in more general terms.

    “Google tends to looking at buying and selling links that pass PageRank as a violation of our guidelines, and if we see that happening multiple times – repeated times – then the actions that we take get more and more severe, so we’re more willing to take stronger action whenever we see repeat violations,” he says.

    That’s the first thing to keep in mind, if you’re trying to recover. Don’t try to recover by breaking the rules more, because that will just make Google’s vengeance all the greater when it inevitably catches you.

    Google continues to bring the hammer down on any black hat link network it can get its hands on, by the way. Just the other day, Cutts noted that Google has taken out a few of them, following a larger trend that has been going on throughout the year.

    The second thing to keep in mind is that Google wants to know your’e taking its guidelines seriously, and that you really do want to get better – you really do want to play by the rules.

    “If a company were to be caught buying links, it would be interesting if, for example, [if] you knew that it started in the middle of 2012, and ended in March 2013 or something like that,” Cutts continues in the video. “If a company were to go back and disavow every single link that they had gotten in 2012, that’s a pretty monumentally epic, large action. So that’s the sort of thing where a company is willing to say, ‘You know what? We might have had good links for a number of years, and then we just had really bad advice, and somebody did everything wrong for a few months – maybe up to a year, so just to be safe, let’s just disavow everything in that timeframe.’ That’s a pretty radical action, and that’s the sort of thing where if we heard back in a reconsideration request that someone had taken that kind of a strong action, then we could look, and say, ‘Ok, this is something that people are taking seriously.”

    Now, don’t go getting carried away. Google has been pretty clear since the Disavow Links tool launched that this isn’t something that most people want to do.

    Cutts reiterates, “So it’s not something that I would typically recommend for everybody – to disavow every link that you’ve gotten for a period of years – but certainly when people start over with completely new websites they bought – we have seen a few cases where people will disavow every single link because they truly want to get a fresh start. It’s a nice looking domain, but the previous owners had just burned it to a crisp in terms of the amount of webspam that they’ve done. So typically what we see from a reconsideration request is people starting out, and just trying to prune a few links. A good reconsideration request is often using the ‘domain:’ query, and taking out large amounts of domains which have bad links.”

    “I wouldn’t necessarily recommend going and removing everything from the last year or everything from the last year and a half,” he adds. “But that sort of large-scale action, if taken, can have an impact whenever we’re assessing a domain within a reconsideration request.”

    In other words, if your’e willing to go to such great lengths and eliminate such a big number of links, Google’s going to notice.

    I don’t know that it’s going to get you out of the penalty box in eleven days (as the Interflora question mentions), but it will at least show Google that you mean business, and, in theory at least, help you get out of it.

    Much of what Cutts has to say this time around echoes things he has mentioned in the past. Earlier this year, he suggested using the Disavow Links tool like a “machete”. He noted that Google sees a lot of people trying to go through their links with a fine-toothed comb, when they should really be taking broader swipes.

    “For example, often it would help to use the ‘domain:’ operator to disavow all bad backlinks from an entire domain rather than trying to use a scalpel to pick out the individual bad links,” he said. “That’s one reason why we sometimes see it take a while to clean up those old, not-very-good links.”

    On another occasion, he discussed some common mistakes he sees people making with the Disavow Links tool. The first time someone attempts a reconsideration request, people are taking the scalpel (or “fine-toothed comb”) approach, rather than the machete approach.

    “You need to go a little bit deeper in terms of getting rid of the really bad links,” he said. “So, for example, if you’ve got links from some very spammy forum or something like that, rather than trying to identify the individual pages, that might be the opportunity to do a ‘domain:’. So if you’ve got a lot of links that you think are bad from a particular site, just go ahead and do ‘domain:’ and the name of that domain. Don’t maybe try to pick out the individual links because you might be missing a lot more links.”

    And remember, you need to make sure you’re using the right syntax. You need to use the “domain:” query in the following format:

    domain:example.com

    Don’t add an “http” or a ‘www” or anything like that. Just the domain.

    So, just to recap: Radical, large-scale actions could be just what you need to take to make Google seriously reconsider your site, and could get things moving more quickly than trying single out links from domains. But Google wouldn’t necessarily recommend doing it.

    Oh, Google. You and your crystal clear, never-mixed messaging.

    As Max Minzer commented on YouTube (or is that Google+?), “everyone is going to do exactly that now…unfortunately.”

    Yes, this advice will no doubt lead many to unnecessarily obliterate many of the backlinks they’ve accumulated – including legitimate links – for fear of Google. Fear they won’t be able to make that recovery at all, let alone quickly. Hopefully the potential for overcompensation will be considered if Google decides to use Disavow Links as a ranking signal.

    Would you consider having Google disavow all links from a year’s time? Share your thoughts in the comments.

  • Google Ventures Shares Presentation On Lean Product Management

    Google Ventures, Google’s investment arm, has shared an 80-minute workshop presentation on the topic of lean product management.

    Startup veteran Dan Olsen talks about applying lean startup principles to product management. He covers best practices in understanding customer needs, prioritization, UX design, user testing, and analytics that can be used for product optimization.

    Olsen has 20 years of product management experience. He managed submarine design for the Navy for five years, spent five years managing Quicken at Intuit, led product management at Friendster, was the CEO and co-founder of YourVersion and has consulted with Box.net, YouSendIt and Epocrates.

  • Matt Cutts Talks Content Stitching In New Video

    Google has a new Webmaster Help video out about content that takes text from other sources. Specifically, Matt Cutts responds to this question:

    Hi Matt, can a site still do well in Google if I copy only a small portion of content from different websites and create my own article by combining it all, considering I will mention the source of that content (by giving their URLs in the article)?

    “Yahoo especially used to really hate this particular technique,” says Cutts. “They called it ‘stitching’. If it was like two or three sentences from one article, and two or three sentences from another article, and two or three sentences from another article, they really considered that spam. If all you’re doing is just taking quotes from everybody else, that’s probably not a lot of added value. So I would really ask yourself: are you doing this automatically? Why are you doing this? Why? People don’t just like to watch a clip show on TV. They like to see original content.”

    I don’t know. SportsCenter is pretty popular, and I don’t think it’s entirely for all the glowing commentary. It’s also interesting that he’s talking about this from Yahoo’s perspective.

    “They don’t just want to see an excerpt and one line, and then an excerpt and one line, and that sort of thing,” Cutts continues. “Now it is possible to pull together a lot of different sources, and generate something really nice, but you’re usually synthesizing. For example, Wikipedia will have stuff that’s notable about a particular topic, and they’ll have their sources noted, and they cite all of their sources there, and they synthesize a little bit, you know. It’s not like they’re just copying the text, but they’re sort of summarizing or presenting as neutral of a case as they can. That’s something that a lot of people really enjoy, and if that’s the sort of thing that you’re talking about, that would probably be fine, but if you’re just wholesale copying sections from individual articles, that’s probably going to be a higher risk area, and I might encourage you to avoid that if you can.”

    If you’re creating good content that serves a valid purpose for your users, my guess is that you’ll be fine, but you know Google hates anything automated when it comes to content.

  • The ‘Funniest Person On Twitter’ Talks At Google

    Comedian Rob Delaney, who has been called “the funniest person on Twitter” by Comedy Central, and one of the “50 funniest people” by Rolling Stone, recently gave an “At Google” talk.

    The company has now made the hour-long talk available to all on YouTube. He discusses his memoir “Rob Delaney: Mother. Wife. Sister. Human. Warrior. Falcon. Yardstick. Turban. Cabbage.” among other things.

    The talk was recorded on November 6th.

  • Two Women Twerk on Subway Tracks, Somehow Avoid Darwin Award Nomination

    The video is only 13 seconds long, and we don’t really know what happened after the camera shuts off, but it appears that two women have survived what might be the world’s dumbest twerking exhibition.

    “No face,” says one of the subway twerkers as the camera pans around to the front. Unfortunately for the lead twerker, the cameraman did catch a glimpse of her face – and I’m sure the internet sleuths will figure out her identity before the holiday’s over.

    The two look to avoid the third rail and seem to steer clear of any oncoming train – thus narrowly escaping any future nominations for a Darwin Award. I thought twerking was dead after Miley Cyrus’ VMA performance – and I definitely thought it had run its course after 11-year-olds were doing the move at school dances. Nope, I guess we had to have subway twerking to finally kill it.

    Miley would be so proud. I know their parents sure are.

    Image via YouTube, hat tip to Gothamist

  • Google Shares Tips For Ecommerce AdSense Sites

    Google Shares Tips For Ecommerce AdSense Sites

    Google has made available a recent Hangout on Air with a couple of Googlers from the ecommerce team, who discuss some conversion and optimization tips for ecommerce AdSense publishers.

    They walk you through a presentation on how to make the most of the holiday season. More specifically it gets into creating a user-friendly experience, and capturing mobile opportunities, as well as improving profitability through advertising.

    The video is about a half hour long.

    In related news, Google announced the launch of a new mobile anchor ad for AdSense on smartphones. With this, ads will be anchored at the bottom of the user’s screen as they scroll, unless they dismiss it.

  • Dwyane Wade Videobombs LeBron James With Cartwheels

    Dwyane Wade left teammate LeBron James speechless momentarily following the Miami Heat’s 107-92 victory over the Phoenix Suns on Monday. While LeBron was giving a post-game interview, Dwyane decided to do a couple of cartwheels. (Some people question whether or not what Wade did was really a cartwheel, but we won’t get into that.)

    The look on LeBron James’s face was priceless when he noticed Dwyane doing the cartwheel out the corner of his eye. Just as LeBron turned around, Dwyane did another cartwheel. LeBron is known for photobombing people (Dwyane Wade included), but it’s safe to say that Dwyane is the now the reigning photobomb/videobomb champ after that stunt.

    “Yo, we’re going to a whole ‘nother stratosphere tonight with that one,” James said of the cartwheels. Check out the video of Dwyane Wade’s cartwheels below.

    Both Dwyane and LeBron posted about the cartwheels on Twitter (and if you’re one of those people who don’t think that what Dwyane did constitutes a cartwheel, he throws down the gauntlet):

    The reactions to Dwyane Wade’s videobomb have been varied. Most people were just as amused as LeBron, but others either weren’t amused or weren’t very impressed with Dwyane’s cartwheel skills.

    Is this the best videobomb you’ve seen? Discuss your opinion in the comments section below.

    [Image via YouTube]

  • Home Alone, Your Favorite Xmas Movie, Gets an Honest Trailer

    I’m not going to lie – Home Alone is one of the best things about the holidays. Ever since I was 8 years old, I haven’t let a December go by without watching the John Hughes-produced classic at least once. It’s endlessly quotable, it has a great soundtrack, and it even manages to hit you right in the feels at the end. Plus, Daniel Stern’s scream – it’s a Hollywood legend.

    A few Halloweens ago, a buddy an I went as The Wet Bandits. Everyone knew who we were. You know why? Because everybody loves Home Alone. If your holiday movie schedule doesn’t include Home Alone, Christmas Vacation, and Die Hard, well, that’s unfortunate. I’m not going to pile on, because I assume your holidays were sad if you didn’t watch these movies growing up. Very sad.

    So it brings me great joy to announce that Screen Junkies has finally decided to do one of their honest trailers for Home Alone.

    Buzz, your girlfriend. Woof.

    Image via YouTube

  • Kanye Approves of Seth Rogen’s Bound 2 Parody, Thank God

    Last week, Kanye West released a video for Yeezus‘ closing track, ‘Bound 2,’ and it set the internet ablaze. Horses and a naked Kim Kardashian – that’ll do it. Awesome song, awesome video. Don’t hate, people. What’s not to love about this?

    A week later, Seth Rogen and James Franco gave the internet the parody they deserved.

    So much man love.

    Considering Kanye’s reaction to the last time someone parodied him, it’s nice that I can inform you that both Kim and Kanye approved of Rogen and Franco’s efforts.

    Excellent. No beef, just love. All is right on the internet.

    Image via YouTube

  • Google Talks Measurement Challenges In Analytics Presentation

    Google is sharing a recent presentation about universal analytics on the Google Analytics YouTube channel. The talk from Analytics Advocate Daniel Waisberg took place last month at Foundry Dublin.

    It will take about a half hour of your time as Waisberg talks about the challenges of “measuring the full customer journey,” which include holistic measurement, full credit measurement and active measurement.

    “Learn more about how Google Analytics is trying to help marketers understand better how their customers behave and how to provide them with a better experience,” says Google. “Among the solutions we are creating are: Universal Analytics, Measurement Protocol, Dimension Widening, and Cost Data Upload.”

    If you head over to the channel, you’ll find a plethora of videos Google has made for its Analytics Academy program, as well as an explanation of a recent developer update and a “sizzle reel” from the Google Anaytics Summit 2013.

    Last week, Google introduced new custom dimensions fro Google Analytics.

  • This Video of the Illinois EF-4 Tornado Is as Gut-Wrenching as It Gets

    Over the weekend, tornados rocked the midwest – and one of the hardest-hit towns was Washington, Illinois.

    According to FEMA, more than 1,000 homes sustained damage, and at least 6 people were killed in Illinois. In Washington specifically, at least 120 people were injured.

    And Washington resident Marc Wells has provided one of the most harrowing eyewitness accounts of the EF-4 tornado that hit his neighborhood. Seriously, this is absolutely gut-wrenching.

    Sure, the impending tornado and the rush to seek shelter is terrifying – but what gets me is the sheer destruction and the shock of having your home, as well as everything around you, absolutely leveled.

    “Here is what my oldest daughter Josie Taylor Wells And I experienced, I am so glad Kerry Gorman Wells and the other girls were out of town when this storm came through. Very thankful we were not injured,” says Wells in his YouTube upload.

    Scary stuff.

    Image via YouTube

  • Vine Goes Global with 19 New Languages, New Focus on Unearthing Local Content

    Twitter’s 6-second video app Vine has turned its attention to global expansion by adding support for 19 new languages in their iOS and Android apps.

    Here are the new languages that Vine now supports:

    Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Thai and Turkish. Vine for Android is also available in two additional languages: Filipino and Polish.

    One of the more interesting things from Vine’s announcement is this little bit about working on unearthing local content:

    “We’re also beginning to explore ways to surface Vine videos that are popular in a particular country. Wherever you are in the world – be it Japan, Brazil or somewhere in between – we hope this update makes it easier for you to discover and create videos that bring us all closer together,” said co-founder Colin Kroll.

    Of course, adding a regional flare to Vine’s explore feature would be a move not unlike Twitter’s recent push to make trends more local.

    Earlier this month, Vine finally launched on Windows Phone – but that platform wasn’t mentioned in today’s language support update.

    Vine’s been retooling and adding new features to the app lately – for instance giving users granular editing powers last month.

    Vine topped 40 million users back in August.

    Image via Vine Blog

  • Cutts Talks Disavow Links Tool And Negative SEO

    Google has put out a new Webmaster Help video discussing the Disavow Links tool, and whether or not it’s a good idea to use it even when you don’t have a manual action against your site.

    Google’s Matt Cutts takes on the following question:

    Should webmasters use the disavow tool, even if it is believed that no penalty has been applied? For example, if we believe ‘negative SEO’ has been attempted, or spammy sites we have contacted have not removed links.

    As Cutts notes, the main purpose of the tool is for when you’ve done some “bad SEO” yourself, or someone has on your behalf.

    “At the same time, if you’re at all worried about someone trying to do negative SEO or it looks like there’s some weird bot that’s building up a bunch of links to your site, and you have no idea where it came from, that’s a perfect time to use Disavow as well.”

    “I wouldn’t worrying about going ahead and disavowing links even if you don’t have a message in your webmaster console. So if you have done the work to keep an active look on your backlinks, and you see something strange going on, you don’t have to wait around. Feel free to just preemptively say, ‘This is a weird domain. I have nothing to do with it. I don’t know what this particular bot is doing in terms of making links.’ Just feel free to go ahead and do disavows, even on a domain level.”

    As Cutts has said in the past, feel free to use the tool “like a machete“.