(A Terry Pratchett quote, from the Truth<\/strong>, possibly an old saying, possibly invented on the spot.)<\/p>\n A BBC article said that Birmingham City Council has banned atheist websites<\/a>. <\/p>\n I read this news in my workplace (which seems to randomly ban or allow even this site. There is absolutely no discernable difference in cussword quotient or possible offensiveness between this site on the days when it throws up threatening warning messages that I’ve tried to access a forbidden site and should instantly alert my line manager from the days when it works normally.) <\/p>\n I was shocked. Bloggably shocked, even.<\/p>\n I didn’t – for more than a minute or so – think that Birmingham Council actually wanted to ban atheist sites. The BBC article made it pretty clear it’s some useless off-the-shelf netnanny software that they are using. (In comments on Pharyngula, Cronan, Quidam and Armchair Dissident made excellent points, about the software and way it is set up and used, suggesting that this isn’t a deliberate city council policy, so much as the unthinking use of disturbingly set-up software.)<\/p>\n Well, duh. It’s a local government office. Almost by definition, its software buying decisions are made by people who can’t even use a spreadsheet package. Who are suckers for any sweet-talking sales people on their Preferred Suppliers lists. Who would think it was wildly outside their purchasing remit to pay attention to the details of what the software actually does. And who would rather insert a parking permit into their own left nostril than consult the people who might actually use a program. <\/p>\n But, still, it’s outrageous and the National Secular Society is absolutely right to object to this.<\/p>\n However, tracing the evolution of the reporting of this story in the atheosphere made me aware how easily a news item becomes a myth.<\/p>\n