Coinbase co-founder and CEO Brian Armstrong introduced in a sequence of tweets on Oct 4 {that a} crypto centric documentary capturing his journey of constructing a tech start-up from the bottom up will probably be accessible this Friday 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 is actually prefer to construct a tech firm from the bottom up and encourage others who wish to do the identical.
Based on the CEO, documentary director Greg Kohs and his staff had “unprecedented entry” to Armstrong’s firm, capturing the loopy ups and downs over the span of the final three years. The announcement stated that the documentary will seize “the nice, unhealthy, and ugly” of constructing a tech start-up from the bottom up, to turning into a public firm.
1/ Massive announcement: we have been working with director Greg Kohs on a documentary about cryptocurrency and Coinbase during the last three years, and it is going to be popping out this Friday on Amazon Prime/iTunes/YouTube and so on.
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 needed to demystify what it takes to construct a tech startup and encourage extra folks to begin firms. I additionally needed to demystify crypto.”
The CEO additionally stated he hopes to point out that tech founders are simply common folks making an attempt to create a product that folks need, including that “everybody working in crypto believes it could possibly create a extra truthful, 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 trade ahead.
On Sept 26, Cointelegraph reported that blockchain firm, Veritaseum was suing Coinbase for $320 million {dollars} in an alleged patent infringement case.