The U.K. government is taking unprecedented steps to combat an e-mail that has been widely distributed online.
The "Holocaust Ban" e-mail hoax claims that the Holocaust is no longer going to be studied in U.K. schools because of fears
of offending Muslims. Ed Balls, the U.K.'s secretary of state for children, schools and families, yesterday issued a statement
to media and embassies worldwide denouncing the e-mail as a hoax.
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Balls said he wanted to "put an end once and for all to the myth" spread by the e-mail. He said teaching the Holocaust remains
"non-negotiable" in U.K. schools.
Part of the chain letter email claims: "This week [the] U.K. removed The Holocaust from its school curriculum because it 'offended'
the Moslem population which claims it never occurred. This is a frightening portent of the fear that is gripping the world
and how easily each country is giving into it."
Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for Sophos, warned that the message is "not just propagating via traditional e-mail
but also via social networking websites like Facebook, where people forward nonsense messages to all of their friends without
necessarily engaging their brains."
He said hoaxes wasted valuable bandwidth, impacted staff productivity and could even place e-mail addresses "into the wrong
hands."
Hoax e-mails had been a problem for years, said Cluley, "but this must be the first time that a government has taken such
firm action to debunk one." (Compare antispam products)
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