The Daily Telegraph

Apple executive resigns over return to office

- By James Titcomb

AN APPLE executive has quit the company in protest over the tech giant’s demands that staff return to the office for three days a week.

Ian Goodfellow, Apple’s director of machine learning, told staff on leaving that he disagreed with the company’s insistence on employees returning to its Silicon Valley headquarte­rs, according to technology website The Verge.

He is reported to have said: “I believe strongly that more flexibilit­y would have been the best policy for my team.”

Apple staff must work at least one day in the office and from May 23 they will be required to go into work on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday. Staff will be able to work from home or in the office on Wednesday and Friday and work remotely for four weeks a year.

The policy is stricter than many of those at Silicon Valley firms such as Meta, Google and Twitter, where staff can work remotely permanentl­y or have been given more flexibilit­y over when they work in an office.

Apple staff have protested over the company’s demands and said that employees are leaving because of the requiremen­ts, but Mr Goodfellow is the most senior reported departure.

Tim Cook, Apple’s chief executive, has said that video calls cannot replace the experience of working together. “For all that we’ve been able to achieve while many of us have been separated, the truth is that there has been something essential missing from this past year: each other,” he said last year.

“Video conference calling has narrowed the distance between us, to be sure, but there are things it simply cannot replicate.”

The company has repeatedly delayed its full return-to-office plans following a string of spikes in Covid cases.

Mr Goodfellow is one of the world’s best-known AI researcher­s and was poached from Google in 2019.

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