Skip to main content

Spotify ditches its data centers to live in Google’s cloud

Spotify
With its paid subscriber base climbing steadily, Spotify has decided to move away from its own data centers and onto the cloud. Spotify announced in a blog post Tuesday that Google’s Cloud Platform will be the new home of its infrastructure.

As the streamer’s vice president of engineering and infrastructure, Nicholas Harteau, wrote in the post, the news is “a big deal.” For years, the company opted to operate its own data centers because core cloud services weren’t yet at a place where Spotify felt they offered a balance of quality, performance, and cost that would be worth the move. Their decision to do so now shows that times have changed and cloud services have made important strides.

Although it may seem strange to see Spotify use services offered by a competitor — Google Play Music also offers music streaming — such an arrangement isn’t unprecedented. In fact, Netflix recently wrapped up its migration to Amazon’s cloud. The Internet TV network announced the news on its blog in early February, providing another example of such “co-opetition.”

The value that Spotify expects to get now made the move “a no-brainer,” according to Harteau. “At Spotify we are obsessed with providing a streaming experience that feels as though you have all the music in the world on your phone,” he wrote. “The storage, compute and network services available from cloud providers are as high quality, high performance and low cost as what the traditional approach provides.”

With Spotify’s “large and complex backend,” don’t expect the transition to happen overnight. The company warns that the project will take some time, but ultimately, the move is expected to allow the streaming service to continue to grow, while continuing to offer users the quality music streaming experience they’re used to.

Digital Trends reached out to Google for comment, but had not heard back at time of publishing.

Stephanie Topacio Long
Stephanie Topacio Long is a writer and editor whose writing interests range from business to books. She also contributes to…
A new Google Pixel 5a leak just showed off its beefy battery
An alleged render of the Pixel 5a 5G.

Just ahead of its expected August launch, Google's Pixel 5a has provided yet another leak, this one focused on its components. This new report comes from sources in repair stores, as shared by Android Police on Sunday. In photos showing off the upcoming Pixel 5a, the report confirms some of the previous Pixel leaks, including the battery size and overall design.

As expected, the Pixel 5a 5G will look quite similar to the Pixel 4a, Pixel 4a 5G, and Pixel 5. The headphone jack makes a return as a stalwart of the Pixel A-Series line, though the power button appears to be ribbed, unlike on previous Pixels.

Read more
Google deploys a Jaguar I-Pace as its first all-electric Street View car
Google Street View's first all-electric car, a Jaguar I-Pace.

Google has captured well over 10 million miles of global Street View imagery since its camera-equipped cars first hit the streets 14 years ago.

But despite the emergence of greener vehicle technology, the company has only now gotten around to deploying its first all-electric Street View car.

Read more
Google shows off its amazing new Quantum A.I. Campus
Quantum

Google is looking to the future with its work on quantum computing, next-generation computer architecture that abides by the rules of quantum, rather than classical, mechanics. This allows for the possibility of unimaginable densities of information to be both stored and manipulated, opening up some game-changing possibilities for the future of computing as we know it.

At Tuesday’s Google I/O event, the search giant announced its new Quantum A.I. Campus, a Santa Barbara, California, facility which will advance Google’s (apparently considerable) quantum ambitions. The campus includes Google’s inaugural quantum data center, quantum hardware research laboratories, and quantum processor chip fabrication facilities.

Read more