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The Australian Bitcoin Industry Association has filed a complaint with the ABC, accusing it of inaccurate reporting.
The Australian Bitcoin Industry Association (ABIB) has formally lodged a complaint with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), accusing its Bitcoin coverage of being “factually inaccurate and misleading.” The complaint targets an ABC article that primarily described Bitcoin as a money laundering tool, overlooking its use cases in energy stability, humanitarian aid, and sovereign reserves.
The documents submitted by ABIB point out that the ABC article reduced Bitcoin to being “useless,” focusing on price volatility and money laundering as the core issues, while ignoring publicly recognized legitimate uses and technological potential. The industry body is urging ABC to issue a correction and to cite domain experts in future reports.
This incident comes at a pivotal time for cryptocurrency regulatory reform in Australia. The 2025 “Corporations Amendment (Digital Asset Framework)” will establish a comprehensive regulatory framework for crypto companies and custody service providers, requiring them to obtain an Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) and introducing two new categories of licenses for digital asset platforms and tokenized custody platforms.
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has clarified that stablecoins, wrapped tokens, tokenized securities, and digital asset wallets fall under the current financial product regulatory regime, requiring service providers to be licensed, with a transition period until June 30, 2026. ASIC emphasized that distributed ledger technology and tokenization are reshaping the global financial landscape, and that Australia risks missing out on global opportunities if it does not accelerate adjustments.
Meanwhile, Australia’s cryptocurrency adoption rate continues to grow, projected to reach 31% in 2025, up from 28% in 2024. Self-managed superannuation fund (SMSF) crypto exposure has increased sevenfold since 2021, surpassing AUD 1.7 billion. Major CEX institutions are also ramping up crypto services targeting the pension market.
ABIB’s complaint not only reflects the gap between media coverage and industry reality but also highlights the delicate balance between rapid development, regulatory improvement, and public perception in Australia’s cryptocurrency ecosystem.