London – The House of Lords Communications Committee has summoned the chief executives of Google, Meta, and TikTok to answer questions about proposed algorithmic accountability standards. The move marks the first time British parliamentarians have directly demanded testimony from tech leaders on the transparency and fairness of automated decision-making systems.
Baroness Stowell, the committee chair, said the hearings were a “necessary step” to understand how algorithms shape public discourse, access to services, and individual rights. “Algorithms are not neutral. They make choices that affect millions of people every day. The public has a right to know how these systems work and who ensures they do no harm,” she said.
The inquiry comes amid growing concern over algorithmic bias in hiring, credit scoring, and content moderation. A recent report by the Ada Lovelace Institute found that 42% of British adults had experienced an algorithm that made a decision about them without their knowledge. “That is staggering,” said Dr. Eleanor Shearer, a research fellow at the institute. “We are living in an algorithmic society but have no equivalent of a food safety standard for code.”
The proposed accountability standards would require companies to publish annual audits of their algorithms, disclose training data sources, and establish independent oversight boards. Tech firms have pushed back, arguing that proprietary algorithms are trade secrets. “We are committed to transparency, but we must also protect intellectual property,” said a spokesperson for Google.
But critics say the self-regulation approach has failed. “We have given them a decade to clean up their act. They have not done so,” said Lord Clement-Jones, a Liberal Democrat peer and longtime tech critic. “If they will not act voluntarily, the state must step in.”
Some experts question whether the Lords have the power to enforce these standards. The House of Lords cannot initiate legislation, but its committees can shape public debate and recommend bills. Baroness Stowell acknowledged the limits: “We are not a court. But we can shine a light and hope that shame and public opinion drive change.”
The summonses are legally enforceable under parliamentary privilege. CEOs who fail to appear could face contempt proceedings, though no such action has ever been taken against a tech executive.
Google’s Sundar Pichai has confirmed he will attend, calling it “an opportunity to explain our approach.” Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg and TikTok’s Shou Zi Chew have not yet responded publicly. A source familiar with Meta’s thinking said the company was “weighing its options” and might send a senior policy executive instead.
Consumer groups have welcomed the hearings but warned against expecting too much. “These companies have legions of lawyers and years of experience in bamboozling regulators,” said James Moore, a digital rights campaigner. “The Lords need to come with sharp questions and real bite.”
The inquiry will begin next month with expert witnesses before the CEOs appear in September. The committee expects to report before the end of the year.
For many, the hearings are a test of British democracy’s ability to hold powerful digital actors to account. As Baroness Stowell put it: “If we cannot make the most powerful men in the world answer for their machines, then who can?”








