As Dave Ward has already mentioned, "it's ASP.NET's way of preventing ID collisions."
A very good example of this is if you're attempting to put a control inside of a custom control, then use that custom control in a repeater, so that custom control control's HTML would be outputted output multiple times for the page.
As others have mentioned, if you need to access the controls for javascript, use the ClientScript property which will give you access to a ClientScriptManager and register your scripts to the page this way. Be sure when writing your scripts to use the ClientID property on the control you're trying to reference instead of just typing in the control's ID.
