Some websites choose to add on a name to their “home page” in order to not confuse search engines, or sometimes they temporarily direct visitors to a special splash page like “It’s share-a-thon time again”, or “win tickets to this weekend’s concert!”).
Permanent redirects are corrected automagically – temporary redirects are up to you – but unless you follow the redirect, you won’t have access to the information on the page. This decision is up to you.
When the editor detects a temporary redirect, it offers the option to accept it as a permanent redirect, which would be appropriate in this example, which then results in:
All you czars are doing a great job! Keep up the good work.
One quirk that showed up is a process called invisible URL redirection. The symptom is a web site will get a 302 redirecting the browser to the same page, but the second time the actual page comes up. Behind the scenes is an invisible frame concealing the actual location of the real web server