As you can see, miniature images of the president appear next to links to whitehouse.gov and Wikipedia. While one small image is still present, the whitehouse.gov page no longer has one. Scroll further and you also see different images of the...
President Obama took his message to the internet last night, streaming the State of the Union address over the WhiteHouse.gov site. We're putting the finishing touches on a new feature for WhiteHouse.gov that will offer an enhanced viewer...
WhiteHouse.gov Tonight, at 9pm EST, President Obama will give his second State of the Union address. For those unfamiliar with American politics, this is an annual speech given by the sitting President addressing the current state of U.S.affairs...
Bush's bio—except for one week when a new story about Bush on WhiteHouse.gov unfortunately featured the word “failure. Lesson learned: Google can protect the president of the U.S.and Digg can take down the “Ron Paul Cabal,” but both seem kinda...
Info was pulled from government sites such as Whitehouse.gov and AmericasLibrary.gov. George Washington pulled up info on the first president from academic kids.com and as well as info on another famous George: George Washington Carver.
Similarly, this doesn't seem to work to give you a page-specific report:
link:whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.html inanchor:miserable Use the linkdomain command, like this:
linkdomain:whitehouse.gov Link domain sort of allows this:
linkdomain...
The old page lived here:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.html The new page lives here:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/president/ Interestingly again, if you visit that page, you'll see that Bush still has a
dedicated page listed here:
http...
inanchor:miserable failure
link:http://www.whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.html doesn't work, nor does
inanchor:miserable failure or even just inanchor:miserable or
inanchor:http://www.whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.html
miserable failure or...
That's right, the search for only the word "failure" returns his WhiteHouse.gov bio page in the number one position at Google, Yahoo, and Gigablast. Poltics aside, the classic "linkbomb" continues to tell us that President G.
I ran a check for those linking to http://www.whitehouse.gov/president/gwbbio.html, the George W. Links are nicely grouped into top level domains, so you can see all the links coming from .edu sites, .gov sites and so on.
As a result, that Iraq: Special Report section is an example of content that was completely blocked, since the word Iraq is in its URL:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/iraq/ To understand, consider these URLs:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news...