on walls and act as screen-savers in insurance companies and City banks; the bestiality sequence from Dispatches is already doing the rounds.
Men are occasionally disciplined for downloading porn, but the emphasis is usually on misuse of company time rather than sexual harassment. Where does that leave women who feel under pressure to be one of the lads and accept it - or quit their jobs?
Sunita Knight-Webb, an employment lawyer, says, "If someone is downloading porn or puts up a whopping great poster of a semi-naked woman, that can amount to sexual harassment and an employee is entitled to complain under the Sexual Discrimination Act. Most employers would be afraid of a tribunal claim and will act."
Alternatively, public sector workers can wait for the Gender Equality Duty to come into force next April. It's hailed as the biggest change in sex equality law in 30 years and you can take part in drafting the code of practice online. 
FIRST POSTED APRIL 28, 2006
David Copperfield, the police officer who writes The First Post's regular Sin City column, reviews Dispatches