 Hi, everyone. John Mueller here with another episode of Ask Google Webmasters, a video series in which we answer your questions about Google Search and websites. Today's question is from Yesam Vinny, who is asking, can Google Evergreen Chromium detect client-side JavaScript redirects? I'm not able to submit Google Search Console indexing requests to pages that have client-side JavaScript redirects to a subscription page. Thank you for all your questions. But first, let me back up a bit and explain where some of that comes from before diving into the question itself. Googlebot is what we use to crawl the web, to find public and crawlable pages that we can include in our search results. Over the years, we've started using a version of Chrome to do a part of that, to make sure that we can see what users would see when they use their browsers to view those pages. Until earlier this year, we were using a special older version of Chrome for that. And now, we've started using a recent version of Chrome, and we're updating that automatically over time. A browser that's kept updated automatically is often called an Evergreen browser. So essentially, when we talk about Evergreen Googlebot, we're saying that it's rendering with the recent version of Chrome, similar to what you'd have on your computer as well. By using redirects, you're telling us that you'd prefer to have a different URL, or at least the contents of a different URL indexed. We support JavaScript redirects of different types and follow them similar to how we'd follow server-side redirects. JavaScript redirects are important for, well, unsurprisingly, JavaScript-based sites, which we also work hard to support. All that said, submitting a URL for indexing that redirects doesn't really make much sense for indexing, since the redirect tells us you'd prefer to have the other URL indexed. So my recommendation would be to submit the URL that you'd like to have indexed instead, or even better, make sure that we can discover those URLs automatically. For example, if this URL is linked properly within your website, we'll discover it through our normal crawling anyway. You can also help us to pick up changes a bit faster by using a sitemap file. I hope this helped to clear up some of the questions here. If you have further questions about how Google uses JavaScript in search, make sure to check out our developer documentation linked in the description below. And if you want to ask us a different question, don't forget to use the hashtag Ask Google Webmasters on Twitter.