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www.example.com/default.asp?pg=products&specific=3901392
My main homepage has a PR4, and up til today I thought all my dynamic product pages had PR0. By chance I came across someone in my logs using a URL in the following style:
www.example.com/?pg=products&specific=3901392
The 'default.asp' is omitted. This of course still serves up the same content as default.asp is a standard root file on my server. However, this typing of the URL returns a PR4! In fact, almost every single page has a PR4.
What is strange is that I make no links in my site without the 'default.asp', as well, google lists all these URLs in the SERPs with the 'default.asp' included.
The pages behave as if they have a PR4, traffic-wise, that's why I always thought it was strange that they would have no PR displayed..
What is the quickest, non-SERP wrecking, way to fix this double-indexing issue? I have spent 6 months SEOing this project, I really want to avoid a file rename or something that sends everything back to square one..
[edited by: pageoneresults at 3:22 pm (utc) on Aug. 22, 2004]
[edit reason] Examplified URI References [/edit]
SN
Or for that matter, what about other engines who may have the pages referenced with the root file name? Is it standard procedure to omit the common root names or is it only google?
Thanks