Content area
Full text
Google BigQuery has introduced two commerce-centric connectors to its Data Transfer Service—PayPal and Stripe—in preview, and updated default on-demand query limits to make cost governance more predictable at project creation. The new transfer options let analytics teams ingest payments, payouts, disputes, and settlement data on a schedule without building and maintaining custom extractors. For companies that already centralize marketing, product, and support telemetry in BigQuery, bringing payments into the same warehouse reduces time to analysis: LTV by cohort can be reconciled with actual cash flows, refund patterns can be correlated with release changes, and chargeback risk models can train on fresher data. Because the connectors live inside BigQuery's managed transfer layer, scheduling, monitoring, and error handling follow the same playbook used for other sources. In parallel, Google adjusted the default QueryUsagePerDay limit for on-demand projects. New projects now start at a 200 TiB per-day cap by default, while existing projects received baselines...




