![tanks ascii art tanks ascii art](https://ih0.redbubble.net/image.25072010.2277/flat,1000x1000,075,f.u3.jpg)
(Click to enlarge.)Īnother “air support” variation of the ASCII art has also been seen in the comment section for Ylvis’s “ The Fox.” So far we’ve seen the ASCII art in the comment sections of videos from Justin Bieber, Psy, and Lady Gaga.
![tanks ascii art tanks ascii art](https://images.saymedia-content.com/.image/t_share/MTc2NDU1MjU0MzEzMjgwNzI1/ascii.jpg)
Copy and paste this all over YouTube if you are with us.” “Bob is building an army,” the caption reads. Over the past 48 hours, YouTubers have blanketed the comments sections of some of the Internet’s biggest videos with ASCII art of a tank and a man hoisting his arm up in the air. The most interesting form of retaliation against Google has been through a grassroots campaign called “Bob is building an army.” And a day after the changes were made, Jawed Karim, who founded the video hosting site with Chad Hurley and Steven Chen in 2005, spoke out against Google+ in his first YouTube comment in eight years. A petition imploring Google to rollback the feature has collected 134,000 digital signatures. High profile YouTubers like AlphaOmegaSin have created videos condemning the change. Most of the backlash against the change has focused around anonymity, since Google+ requires people to use their real names. The new feature was quietly rolled out while the world gawked at Twitter’s initial public offering.
![tanks ascii art tanks ascii art](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-ZsgIX4F2qeU/VmRbGYCkU3I/AAAAAAAACcU/5ot_BhcdGeE/w1200-h630-p-k-no-nu/Chat+Art+For+Clash+Of+Clans.jpg)
7, Google began requiring YouTube users to sign into Google+ before commenting on videos. Oh, and Bob is an ASCII-art stick figure. Only this battle is being fought online, and Bob’s foe is the unflinching behemoth Google. Patton at the Battle of the Bulge, a man known only as “Bob” is leading thousands of tanks into the heat of combat.