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MATT CUTTS: Hi, everybody. I wanted to give you an update on underscores versus dashes in URLs. This is something that a lot of people have asked me about. And I had talked about it a long time ago. And so I figured it was time for an update. So first, let me give a little bit of history about why, whenever we see an underscore, we join that in the URL rather than separate using that. So what I mean? Well, if you say red dash widget in a URL, we view that dash as a separator. So we index the word red, and we index the word widget. And those are separate. Whereas if you were to have War of 1812 with underscores-- so, war of 1812-- instead of separating on the underscores we actually glom all those together. So thatamp;#39;s one term that you could find by searching for war underscore of underscore 1812. Seems kind of weird. So why does Google do it that way? Well, whenever we started, AltaVista was huge. We were just this little tiny company. And we were all very techie. Lots of comput