The Woz is deactivating.

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak is bidding farewell to Facebook in reaction to its data privacy scandal.

“Users provide every detail of their life to Facebook and… Facebook makes a lot of advertising money off this,” he wrote in an email to USA Today. “The profits are all based on the user’s info, but the users get none of the profits back.”

Wozniak said he’d rather pay for Facebook than have his personal information used by advertisers.

He also said that at least over at Apple, they respect people’s privacy.

“Apple makes its money off of good products, not off you,” he wrote. “As they say, with Facebook, you are the product.”

Wozniak said he didn’t mind saying goodbye to his 5,000 Facebook friends. Still, he didn’t delete his Facebook account — just deactivated it — for fear that someone else would snatch up the screen name “stevewoz.”

“I don’t want someone else grabbing it, even another Steve Wozniak,” he said.

This surprise announcement comes as Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is set to testify on Capitol Hill on Tuesday and Wednesday about the company’s ongoing data privacy scandal.

Facebook is under fire due to the potential misuse of user data by the political targeting firm Cambridge Analytica. The social media platform estimates that 87 million people, mostly in the US, may have had their personal data improperly shared.

Starting Monday, those millions of users will get a message in their news feeds letting them know their data was shared with Cambridge Analytica.