Coinbase co-founder and CEO Brian Armstrong introduced in a collection of tweets on Oct. 4 {that a} crypto-centric documentary capturing his journey of constructing a tech startup from the bottom up might be accessible Oct. 7 on Amazon Prime, iTunes, YouTube and different streaming platforms.
The documentary, Coin: A Founder’s Story, intends to tug again the curtain and present folks what it’s actually wish to construct a tech firm from the bottom up and encourage others who wish to do the identical.
In response to the CEO, documentary director Greg Kohs and his workforce had “unprecedented entry” to Armstrong’s firm, capturing the loopy ups and downs over the span of the final three years. The announcement mentioned that the documentary will seize “the great, unhealthy, and ugly” of constructing a tech startup from the bottom as much as turning into a public firm.
1/ Huge announcement: we have been working with director Greg Kohs on a documentary about cryptocurrency and Coinbase during the last three years, and it will likely be popping out this Friday on Amazon Prime/iTunes/YouTube and many others.
See the trailer right here: https://t.co/JNAc2pjJPf
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) October 4, 2022
Armstrong shared, “I agreed to do that documentary as a result of I wished to demystify what it takes to construct a tech startup and encourage extra folks to start out corporations. I additionally wished to demystify crypto.”
The CEO additionally mentioned he hopes to indicate that tech founders are simply common people attempting to create a product that folks need, including that “everybody working in crypto believes it might create a extra honest, free, and world monetary system.”
The CEO inspired everybody to observe the movie, together with policymakers, as he believes it is going to assist advance the reason for cryptocurrency, in addition to present the motivations of many hard-working people steering the business ahead.
On Sept 26, Cointelegraph reported that blockchain firm Veritaseum was suing Coinbase for $320 million {dollars} in an alleged patent infringement case.