Chief Privacy Officer Jane Horvath will be leaving the company soon to work at a law firm, Bloomberg News reported citing people familiar with the matter.
Horvath, who joined Apple in 2011, is taking a job at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, the report said.
The iPhone maker’s top privacy executive, who is also a lawyer, had previously served in key privacy roles at Google the US Department of Justice, as per her LinkedIn profile.
Horvath was hired to formalize privacy practices after the 2011 “locationgate” scandal, in which iPhones were found to be gathering information about users’ whereabouts.
The reported move by Horvath also comes after Apple upended the digital ad industry by introducing new iPhone privacy controls last year, which hurt the ability for firms like Meta and Snap to target and measure ads on their apps.