{"id":23815,"date":"2023-09-03T21:30:07","date_gmt":"2023-09-03T21:30:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/107292864"},"modified":"2023-09-03T21:30:07","modified_gmt":"2023-09-03T21:30:07","slug":"instacarts-ipo-filing-sparked-an-online-spat-between-cloud-rivals-snowflake-and-databricks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp.worldtechguide.net\/instacarts-ipo-filing-sparked-an-online-spat-between-cloud-rivals-snowflake-and-databricks\/","title":{"rendered":"Instacart’s IPO filing sparked an online spat between cloud rivals Snowflake and Databricks"},"content":{"rendered":"

<\/span><\/p>\n

\n
\n
\n

A banner for Snowflake Inc. is displayed at the New York Stock Exchange to celebrate the company’s initial public offering, Sept. 16, 2020.<\/p>\n

Brendan McDermid | Reuters<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n

\n

Buried on page 280 of Instacart’s IPO filing<\/span> last week was a paragraph that caused a brouhaha between two companies that have nothing to do with grocery delivery.<\/p>\n

One of Instacart’s board members is Frank Slootman<\/span>, the CEO of Snowflake, a publicly traded company that helps businesses store and manage hefty workloads in the cloud. Slootman joined<\/span> Instacart’s board in 2021 and, because of that relationship, the company has to disclose its business ties to Snowflake.<\/p>\n

On first blush, the Instacart spending figure looks troubling for Snowflake.<\/p>\n

Instacart said it “made payments to Snowflake” of $13 million in 2020, a number that increased to $28 million in 2021 and $51 million in 2022 for the company’s “cloud-based data warehousing services.” The 2023 numbers appear to show a reversal, with Instacart saying “we anticipate we will pay Snowflake approximately $15 million” for the full year.<\/p>\n

That would be a frightening 71% drop in payments.<\/p>\n

But Snowflake<\/span>