Trust Is Not a Feature: The Corporate Capture of AI Transparency

Somewhere between the press releases and the product demos, something went quietly wrong with explainable AI. What began as a serious academic and civil liberties concern about algorithmic opacity has been repackaged, polished, and slotted neatly into enterprise software brochures. The question of whether people deserve to understand why a machine denied them healthcare, flagged them as a fraud risk, or recommended a longer prison sentence has been quietly reframed. It is no longer about rights. It is about features.
The global explainable AI market was valued at approximately 7.79 billion US dollars in 2024, according to Grand View Research, and is projected to reach 21.06 billion dollars by 2030. These are not the figures of a civil liberties movement. This is a growth industry. And the distinction matters enormously, because the people building these tools and the people most harmed by opaque algorithms are almost never the same people. The explainability that corporations are selling is designed for boardrooms and compliance departments, not for the individuals whose lives hang in the balance of an algorithmic output.
When the Algorithm Decides Your Future
To understand why explainability matters, you need only look at what happens when it is absent. In Australia, the Robodebt scheme ran from 2016 to 2019, deploying an automated data-matching algorithm to calculate welfare debts by averaging annual income across fortnights. The method was mathematically crude and, as a 2019 Federal Court ruling determined, legally invalid. No warrant existed in social security law that entitled the administering agency to use income averaging as a proxy for actual income in fortnightly measurement periods. This was known internally because of legal advice received by the Department of Social Security as early as 2014. Yet the algorithm asserted 1.7 billion Australian dollars in debts against 453,000 people. A total of 746 million Australian dollars was wrongfully recovered from 381,000 individuals before the scheme was finally dismantled. The Royal Commission, established in August 2022 under Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, heard testimony from families of young people who had died by suicide after receiving algorithmically generated debt notices they could not understand or contest.
At the height of the scheme in 2017, 20,000 debt notices were being issued per week. None of them came with a meaningful explanation of how the debt had been calculated. The University of Melbourne described the core flaw plainly: averaging a year's worth of earnings across each fortnight is no way to accurately calculate fortnightly pay, particularly for casual workers whose income fluctuates. Yet the system operated for years, with human oversight progressively removed from the process. The Oxford University Blavatnik School of Government described Robodebt as “a tragic case of public policy failure,” one in which the efficiency benefits of automation were pursued without regard for legal authority, ethical safeguards, or the basic dignity of the people affected. In September 2024, the Australian Public Service Commission concluded its investigation, resulting in fines and demotions for several officials, though notably no one was dismissed from their role.
The Netherlands offers another instructive case. The Dutch childcare benefits scandal, which ultimately forced the government's resignation in January 2021, involved an algorithmic system that flagged benefit claims as potentially fraudulent. A report by the Dutch Data Protection Authority revealed that the system used a self-learning algorithm where dual nationality and foreign-sounding names functioned as indicators of fraud risk. Tens of thousands of parents, predominantly from ethnic minority and low-income backgrounds, were falsely accused and forced to repay legally obtained benefits. Amnesty International's 2021 report, titled “Xenophobic Machines,” described the outcome as a “black box system” that created “a black hole of accountability.” The Dutch government publicly acknowledged in May 2022 that institutional racism within the Tax and Customs Administration was a root cause.
These are not hypothetical scenarios. They are documented failures with named victims, legal findings, and parliamentary consequences. And in every case, the absence of explainability was not a minor technical limitation. It was the mechanism through which harm was inflicted and accountability was evaded.
The Quiet Rebranding of a Democratic Demand
The academic roots of explainable AI are firmly planted in concerns about justice, accountability, and democratic governance. Cathy O'Neil's 2016 book “Weapons of Math Destruction” identified three defining characteristics of harmful algorithmic systems: opacity, scale, and damage. O'Neil, who holds a PhD in mathematics from Harvard University and founded the algorithmic auditing company ORCAA, argued that mathematical models encoding human prejudice were being deployed at scale without any mechanism for those affected to understand or challenge the decisions made about them. As she wrote, “the math-powered applications powering the data economy were based on choices made by fallible human beings,” and many of those choices “encoded human prejudice, misunderstanding, and bias into the software systems that increasingly managed their lives.”
That argument was fundamentally about power. It asked who gets to know, who gets to question, and who gets to change the systems that shape lives. But somewhere in the translation from academic critique to enterprise software, the language shifted. Explainability stopped being a demand made by citizens and became a capability offered by vendors.
IBM now markets AI Explainability 360 as an open-source toolkit, and its watsonx.governance platform promises to “accelerate responsible and explainable AI workflows.” Microsoft offers InterpretML and Fairlearn as part of its Responsible AI toolkit. Google's Vertex AI platform includes explainability features as standard enterprise offerings. These are not trivial contributions. The technical work behind SHAP values, LIME interpretations, and attention visualisations represents genuine scientific progress. But the framing has fundamentally changed. Explainability is positioned as a competitive advantage for organisations, not as a right belonging to the individuals whose lives are affected by algorithmic decisions.
The Stanford AI Index Report 2024 found that 44 per cent of surveyed organisations identified transparency and explainability as key concerns regarding AI adoption. But look at that statistic carefully. It measures corporate concern about adoption barriers, not citizen concern about algorithmic justice. The worry is that unexplainable AI might slow enterprise deployment, not that it might harm people. Meanwhile, the same report noted that 233 documented AI-related incidents occurred in 2024, a figure that represents not merely a statistical increase but what Stanford described as “a fundamental shift in the threat landscape facing organisations that deploy AI systems.”
Healthcare Algorithms and the 90 Per Cent Error Rate
Perhaps nowhere is the tension between corporate explainability-as-feature and citizen explainability-as-right more acute than in healthcare. In November 2023, a class action lawsuit was filed against UnitedHealth Group alleging that its subsidiary NaviHealth used an AI algorithm called nH Predict to deny elderly patients medically necessary post-acute care. The lawsuit claimed the algorithm had a 90 per cent error rate, based on the proportion of denials that were reversed on appeal, and that UnitedHealth pressured clinical employees to keep patient rehabilitation stays within one per cent of the algorithm's projections. Internal documents revealed that managers set explicit targets for clinical staff to adhere to the algorithm's output, creating a system in which machine-generated projections effectively overruled physician judgment.
UnitedHealth responded that nH Predict was not used to make coverage decisions but rather served as “a guide to help us inform providers, families and other caregivers about what sort of assistance and care the patient may need.” As of February 2025, a federal court denied UnitedHealth's motion to dismiss, allowing breach of contract and good faith claims to proceed. The case remains in pretrial discovery. According to STAT News, the nH Predict algorithm is not limited to UnitedHealth; Humana and several regional health plans also use it, making the implications of this case far broader than a single insurer.
In a separate case filed in July 2023, patients sued Cigna alleging that its PXDX algorithm enabled doctors to automatically deny claims without opening patient files. The lawsuit claimed that Cigna denied more than 300,000 claims in a two-month period, a rate that works out to roughly 1.2 seconds per claim for physician review.
These lawsuits raise a pointed question. If a corporation offers explainable AI as a product feature while simultaneously deploying opaque algorithms to deny healthcare coverage, what exactly is being explained, and to whom? The enterprise customer gets a dashboard and a transparency report. The elderly patient in a nursing home gets a denial letter.
In February 2024, the US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued guidance clarifying that while algorithms can assist in predicting patient needs, they cannot solely dictate coverage decisions. That guidance implicitly acknowledged what the lawsuits alleged explicitly: that the line between algorithmic recommendation and algorithmic decision had been deliberately blurred. California subsequently enacted SB1120 in September 2024, effective January 2025, regulating how AI-enabled tools can be used for processing healthcare claims, with several other states including New York, Pennsylvania, and Georgia considering similar legislation.
Credit Scoring and the Invisible Architecture of Algorithmic Lending
The financial services sector presents another domain where the gap between corporate explainability and citizen understanding is widening. A 2024 Urban Institute analysis of Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data found that Black and Brown borrowers were more than twice as likely to be denied a loan as white borrowers. A 2022 study from UC Berkeley on fintech lending found that African American and Latinx borrowers were charged nearly five basis points in higher interest rates than their credit-equivalent white counterparts, amounting to an estimated 450 million dollars in excess interest payments annually.
Research from Lehigh University tested leading large language models on loan applications and found that LLMs consistently recommended denying more loans and charging higher interest rates to Black applicants compared to otherwise identical white applicants. White applicants were 8.5 per cent more likely to be approved. For applicants with lower credit scores of 640, the gap was even starker: white applicants were approved 95 per cent of the time, while Black applicants with the same financial profile were approved less than 80 per cent of the time.
Stanford's Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence programme identified a deeper structural problem. Their research revealed substantially more “noise” or misleading data in the credit scores of people from minority and low-income households. Scores for minorities were approximately five per cent less accurate in predicting default risk, and scores for those in the bottom fifth of income were roughly 10 per cent less predictive than those for higher-income borrowers. The implication is profound: even a technically perfect explainable AI system, one that faithfully reports why a particular decision was made, would be explaining decisions based on fundamentally flawed data. Fairer algorithms, the Stanford researchers argued, cannot fix a problem rooted in the quality and completeness of the underlying information.
In October 2024, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau fined Apple 25 million dollars and Goldman Sachs 45 million dollars for failures related to the Apple Card, demonstrating that algorithmic transparency issues in financial services carry real regulatory consequences. The CFPB made its position explicit in an August 2024 comment to the Treasury Department: “There are no exceptions to the federal consumer financial protection laws for new technologies.”
Criminal Justice and the Fairness Paradox
The COMPAS algorithm, developed by Northpointe (now Equivant), has been used across US courts to assess the likelihood that a defendant will reoffend. In 2016, ProPublica published an investigation based on analysis of risk scores assigned to 7,000 people arrested in Broward County, Florida. The findings were stark. Black defendants were 77 per cent more likely to be flagged as higher risk of committing a future violent crime and 45 per cent more likely to be predicted to commit any future crime, even after controlling for criminal history, age, and gender. Black defendants were also almost twice as likely as white defendants to be labelled higher risk but not actually reoffend, while white defendants were much more likely to be labelled lower risk but subsequently commit other crimes.
Northpointe countered that the algorithm's accuracy rate of approximately 60 per cent was the same for Black and white defendants, arguing that equal predictive accuracy constitutes fairness. This claim prompted researchers at Stanford, Cornell, Harvard, Carnegie Mellon, the University of Chicago, and Google to investigate. They discovered what has since become known as the fairness paradox: when two groups have different base rates of arrest, an algorithm calibrated for equal predictive accuracy will inevitably produce disparities in false positive rates. Mathematical fairness, they concluded, cannot satisfy all definitions of fairness simultaneously.
Tim Brennan, one of the COMPAS creators, acknowledged the difficulty publicly, noting that omitting factors correlated with race, such as poverty, joblessness, and social marginalisation, reduces accuracy. The system, in other words, is accurate precisely because it encodes structural inequality. Explaining how COMPAS works does not make it fair. It simply makes the unfairness more visible, assuming anyone is looking. In Kentucky, legislators responded to these concerns by enacting H.B. 366 in 2024, limiting how algorithm or risk assessment tool scores may be used in criminal justice proceedings.
This is the deeper problem with treating explainability as a feature. A fully explainable system that faithfully reproduces discriminatory patterns is not a just system. It is a transparent injustice. And selling transparency tools without addressing the underlying fairness problem is, at best, incomplete and, at worst, a form of sophisticated misdirection.
The Regulatory Patchwork and Its Widening Gaps
Europe has made the most ambitious attempt to legislate algorithmic explainability. The EU AI Act, which entered into force in stages beginning in 2024, establishes a risk-based framework categorising AI systems from minimal to unacceptable risk. Article 13 requires that high-risk AI systems be “designed and developed in such a way as to ensure that their operation is sufficiently transparent to enable deployers to interpret a system's output and use it appropriately.” Article 86 creates an individual right to explanation for decisions made by high-risk AI systems that significantly affect health, safety, or fundamental rights.
The General Data Protection Regulation, in force since 2018, already contained the seeds of this approach. Article 22 of the GDPR establishes a general prohibition on decisions based solely on automated processing that produce legal effects or similarly significant impacts. Articles 13 through 15 require organisations to provide “meaningful information about the logic involved” in automated decision-making. The UK Information Commissioner's Office has issued detailed guidance on these provisions, emphasising that a superficial or rubber-stamp human review does not satisfy the requirement for meaningful human involvement.
In the United States, the legislative approach has been markedly slower. The Algorithmic Accountability Act, first introduced in 2019 by Senator Ron Wyden, Senator Cory Booker, and Representative Yvette Clarke, has been reintroduced in each subsequent Congress, most recently in 2025 as both S.2164 in the Senate and H.R.5511 in the House. The bill would require large companies to conduct impact assessments of automated decision systems used in high-stakes domains including housing, employment, credit, and education. The Electronic Privacy Information Center and other civil society organisations have endorsed the 2025 version. Yet the bill has never received a floor vote. The statistical reality is sobering: only about 11 per cent of bills introduced in Congress make it past committee, and approximately two per cent are enacted into law.
Yet even the European framework has practical limitations. The EU AI Act's explainability requirements remain, as several legal scholars have noted, abstract. They do not specify precise metrics, testing protocols, or minimum standards for what constitutes a sufficient explanation. A corporation can comply with the letter of Article 13 by providing technical documentation that is impenetrable to the average person whose loan application was rejected or whose benefit claim was denied. The right to explanation exists on paper, but the explanation itself may be functionally useless to the person who needs it most.
The Dutch SyRI case illustrates both the promise and limits of legal intervention. In February 2020, the District Court of The Hague ruled that the System Risk Indication, a government fraud-detection system that had been cross-referencing citizens' personal data across multiple databases since 2014, failed to strike a fair balance between fraud detection and the human right to privacy. The Dutch government did not appeal, and SyRI was banned. But as investigative outlet Lighthouse Reports subsequently discovered, a slightly adapted version of the same algorithm quietly continued operating in some of the country's most vulnerable neighbourhoods.
Legal rights, it turns out, are only as strong as the enforcement mechanisms behind them. And when the entities deploying opaque algorithms are also among the most powerful institutions in society, whether governments or multinational corporations, enforcement becomes a question of political will rather than legal architecture.
The Corporate Incentive Structure Problem
There is a fundamental misalignment between what corporations mean when they say “explainable AI” and what citizens need when an algorithm makes a decision about their life. For corporations, explainability serves several functions: regulatory compliance, risk management, debugging efficiency, and marketing differentiation. IBM's watsonx.governance platform explicitly positions itself as helping enterprises “accelerate responsible and explainable AI workflows.” Microsoft's Responsible AI Standard is marketed as giving organisations “trust from highly regulated industries.” Google's Vertex AI emphasises seamless integration with existing enterprise data infrastructure.
None of this is inherently dishonest. These tools do real technical work. But they are designed to serve the interests of the organisation deploying the AI, not the individual subjected to its decisions. The enterprise customer receives model interpretability dashboards, feature importance rankings, and compliance documentation. The person whose mortgage application was declined, whose insurance claim was denied, or whose parole was refused receives, at most, a letter stating that a decision has been made.
The Stanford AI Index Report 2024 found that the number of AI-related regulations in the United States rose from just one in 2016 to 25 in 2023. Globally, the regulatory landscape is expanding rapidly. Yet the same report noted that leading AI developers still lack transparency, with scores on the Foundation Model Transparency Index averaging just 58 per cent in May 2024, and then declining back to approximately 41 per cent in 2025, effectively reversing the previous year's progress.
The market responds to incentives. When explainability is primarily valued as a compliance tool and a market differentiator, the incentive is to produce the minimum viable explanation, one that satisfies regulators and reassures enterprise buyers, rather than the maximum useful explanation, one that genuinely empowers the affected individual to understand and challenge the decision.
Silenced Voices and Structural Resistance
The people best positioned to challenge this dynamic from within the technology industry have often faced significant consequences for doing so. In December 2020, Timnit Gebru, the technical co-lead of Google's Ethical AI team, announced that she had been forced out of the company. The dispute centred on a research paper she co-authored, titled “On the Dangers of Stochastic Parrots: Can Language Models Be Too Big?“, which examined the risks of large language models, including the reproduction of biased and discriminatory language from training data and the environmental costs of massive computational resources.
Gebru, who holds a PhD from Stanford and co-founded Black in AI, had previously co-authored landmark research with Joy Buolamwini at MIT demonstrating that facial recognition systems from IBM and Microsoft exhibited significantly higher error rates when identifying darker-skinned individuals. That 2018 paper, “Gender Shades,” published at the Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency, found that facial recognition misidentified Black women at rates up to 35 per cent higher than white men. The research played a direct role in Amazon, IBM, and Microsoft subsequently pulling facial recognition technology from law enforcement use during the 2020 protests following the killing of George Floyd.
Google's head of AI research at the time, Jeff Dean, stated that Gebru's paper “didn't meet our bar for publication.” More than 1,200 Google employees signed an open letter calling the incident “unprecedented research censorship.” An additional 4,500 people, including researchers at DeepMind, Microsoft, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon, signed a letter demanding transparency. Two Google employees subsequently resigned over the matter. As the Brookings Institution noted, because AI systems are typically built with proprietary data and are often accessible only to employees of large technology companies, internal ethicists sometimes represent the only check on whether these systems are being responsibly deployed.
Gebru went on to found the Distributed AI Research Institute, an independent laboratory free from corporate influence. But her departure highlighted a structural problem that no amount of enterprise explainability tooling can address. When the organisations building AI systems also control the research agenda, the funding pipelines, and the publication processes, internal accountability becomes fragile. And when that fragile accountability breaks down, the people who suffer are not the shareholders or the enterprise customers. They are the individuals and communities at the sharp end of algorithmic decision-making.
What Genuine Algorithmic Accountability Would Require
If explainability is to function as a genuine safeguard rather than a marketing feature, several structural changes would be necessary. First, the right to explanation must be defined in terms that are meaningful to the person receiving the explanation, not merely to the organisation providing it. A compliance document written in technical jargon for a regulatory filing is not an explanation in any meaningful democratic sense. The EU AI Act's Article 86 gestures towards this principle by requiring “clear and meaningful explanations,” but without specific standards for clarity and meaning, the provision risks becoming another box to tick.
Second, independent algorithmic auditing needs to become routine, mandatory, and publicly transparent. Cathy O'Neil's ORCAA represents one model, but algorithmic auditing remains largely voluntary and commercially driven. The entities most in need of scrutiny, those deploying AI in healthcare, criminal justice, welfare administration, and financial services, should be subject to mandatory external audits with publicly published results, much as financial institutions are subject to independent accounting audits.
Third, the technical capacity for explainability must be matched by institutional capacity for contestability. An explanation is only useful if the person receiving it has a realistic mechanism to challenge the decision. The UnitedHealth nH Predict lawsuit revealed that the company allegedly operated with the knowledge that only 0.2 per cent of denied patients would file appeals. When the appeals process is sufficiently onerous, the right to contest becomes theoretical rather than practical.
Fourth, the conversation about explainability must be reconnected to the conversation about fairness. The COMPAS fairness paradox demonstrated that transparency alone does not resolve structural discrimination. A perfectly explainable system that reproduces racial disparities is not a success story. It is a more legible failure. Explainability without fairness is surveillance dressed in democratic clothing. And the Stanford research on credit scoring noise demonstrates that even perfectly transparent systems produce misleading outputs when the underlying data is itself corrupted by historical discrimination.
Finally, the research community working on these questions needs structural independence from the corporations whose systems they are evaluating. The departure of Timnit Gebru from Google, and the subsequent departures of other ethics researchers from major technology companies, revealed the tension between corporate interests and independent scrutiny. Public funding for independent AI research, housed in universities and civil society organisations rather than corporate laboratories, is not a luxury. It is a prerequisite for credible accountability.
The Trust Deficit That Technology Cannot Solve
The Ipsos survey cited in the Stanford AI Index Report 2024 found that 52 per cent of people globally express nervousness about AI products and services, a 13 percentage point increase from 2022. Pew Research data from the same period showed that 52 per cent of Americans feel more concerned than excited about AI, up from 37 per cent in 2022. Trust in AI companies to protect personal data fell from 50 per cent in 2023 to 47 per cent in 2024.
These numbers reflect something that no amount of explainability tooling can fix on its own. The trust deficit is not primarily a technical problem. It is a political and institutional problem. People do not distrust AI because they lack access to SHAP values and feature importance plots. They distrust AI because they have watched algorithms falsely accuse thousands of Australian welfare recipients of fraud, discriminate against ethnic minorities in Dutch benefit assessments, deny elderly Americans medically necessary care, charge Black and Latino borrowers higher interest rates on identical loan profiles, and assign higher risk scores to Black defendants in American courts.
Trust is not a product feature. It is not something that can be engineered into a dashboard or bundled into an enterprise software licence. Trust is earned through demonstrated accountability, genuine transparency, meaningful contestability, and consistent consequences when systems cause harm. Until the conversation about explainable AI shifts from what corporations can sell to what citizens are owed, the transparency will remain largely illusory, a well-lit window into a process that nobody with real power intends to change.
The XAI market will continue growing towards its projected 21 billion dollars by 2030. The enterprise dashboards will become more sophisticated. The compliance documentation will become more thorough. But unless explainability is treated as a fundamental democratic right rather than a premium product feature, the people who most need to understand why an algorithm changed their life will remain the last to know.
References and Sources
Grand View Research, “Explainable AI Market Size and Share Report, 2030,” grandviewresearch.com, 2024.
Royal Commission into the Robodebt Scheme, Commonwealth of Australia, Letters Patent issued 25 August 2022, published 2023.
University of Melbourne, “The Flawed Algorithm at the Heart of Robodebt,” pursuit.unimelb.edu.au, 2023.
Oxford University Blavatnik School of Government, “Australia's Robodebt Scheme: A Tragic Case of Public Policy Failure,” bsg.ox.ac.uk, 2023.
Australian Public Service Commission, Investigation Findings on Robodebt Officials, September 2024.
Amnesty International, “Xenophobic Machines: Discrimination Through Unregulated Use of Algorithms in the Dutch Childcare Benefits Scandal,” amnesty.org, October 2021.
Dutch Data Protection Authority (Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens), investigation report on the childcare benefits algorithm, 2020.
Cathy O'Neil, “Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy,” Crown Publishing, 2016.
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Healthcare Finance News, “Class Action Lawsuit Against UnitedHealth's AI Claim Denials Advances,” healthcarefinancenews.com, February 2025.
ProPublica, “Machine Bias: There's Software Used Across the Country to Predict Future Criminals. And It's Biased Against Blacks,” and “Bias in Criminal Risk Scores Is Mathematically Inevitable, Researchers Say,” propublica.org, 2016.
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Joy Buolamwini and Timnit Gebru, “Gender Shades: Intersectional Accuracy Disparities in Commercial Gender Classification,” Proceedings of Machine Learning Research, Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency, 2018.
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Adair Morse and Robert Bartlett, UC Berkeley, “Consumer-Lending Discrimination in the FinTech Era,” Journal of Financial Economics, 2022.
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Stanford HAI, “How Flawed Data Aggravates Inequality in Credit,” hai.stanford.edu, 2021.
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Apple Card Enforcement Action against Apple and Goldman Sachs, and Comment to US Treasury Department on AI in Financial Services, 2024.
US Congress, Algorithmic Accountability Act of 2025, S.2164 and H.R.5511, 119th Congress, 2025.
Kentucky General Assembly, H.B. 366, Limiting Use of Risk Assessment Tool Scores in Criminal Justice, enacted 2024.
California Legislature, SB1120, Regulation of AI in Healthcare Claims Processing, enacted September 2024, effective January 2025.

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk








