The transaction marks the first full takeover by a Chinese
company on Berlin's growing startup scene. In the last
significant deal, Alibaba's rival Tencent Holdings participated
in a $160 million funding round for online bank N26 in March
2018.
Data Artisans CEO Kostas Tzoumas said Alibaba would also invest
an undisclosed sum in the company to develop Apache Flink, its
open-source software that can process large data volumes, and to
expand into new business areas.
The price of the deal was reported to be 90 million euros in the
media, including German newspaper Handelsblatt. Data Artisans
declined to comment on the purchase price.
Alibaba, which competes with e-commerce group Amazon.com, has
been a customer of Data Artisans since 2016. The German company,
which was founded in 2014, also serves clients including Netflix
and Uber [UBER.UL].
"Typical use cases include live fraud detection, direct
interaction with internet users and real-time financial
transactions," said Tzoumas.
Alibaba said this week it was deepening its partnership with
Data Artisans and collaborating to develop software that can
process large amounts of data.
(Reporting by Nadine Schimroszik; Writing by Thomas Seythal and
Douglas Busvine. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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