Birmingham City
Council could be facing legal action after it installed an internet
filtering system that breaks religious discrimination rules.
The system, Bluecoat WebFilter, allows computer users to view sites on a
variety of religious organisations, including Christianity, Islam and Hinduism,
but blocks those that cover "occult practices, atheistic views, voodoo rituals
or any other form of mysticism".
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Lawyers from the
National Secular
Society are examining the system and have said they may take legal action
under religious discrimination laws.
"We suspect that the Council have not set out to contravene or reverse their
own equal employment policies and that this problem results from someone in the
Council acting in a thoughtless way," said National Secular Society president,
Terry Sanderson.
"We just hope that common sense prevails and the Council resolves the matter
without submitting themselves needlessly to legal action which would bring more
unwelcome publicity."
A city council statement said the authority had a "long-standing internet
usage policy for staff".
It added: "We are currently implementing new internet monitoring software to
make the control of internet access easier to manage.
"The aim of this is to provide greater control for individual line managers
to monitor internet usage, and for departments, such as trading standards and
child protection, to gain access, if needed, to certain sites for business
reasons."
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