Now I see... Been a while, almost a year and this month it finally goes live.
If I understand it correctly, Tether won't be able to restrict or limit access or usage of USDT on RGB and users in, say, the EU would be able to use it without fearing that the EU might force Tether to bother them in any way?
If so that's some great timing. Either a coincidence, or they knew the music was about to stop for them in the EU at least a year ago.
Do you think it's somehow related to Tether not managing to secure a MiCa license and as a result getting kicked out of EU?
Issuing USDT on a truly immutable chain to avoid having to kneel to the regulators?
No, I do not think so. If Tether makes the RGB protocol v0.11.1 and USDT was able to be on bitcoin addresses, this can not change EU licensing requirements.
Maybe I'm wrong, but I suppose that due to the immutable nature of the chain, even if the EU regulators take some action against Tether or try to enforce them to limit/restrict their product's usage in the EU via legal channels, there would be no technical possibility for Tether to do so hence Tether couldn't be held accountable?
Again, I'm not sure it would work this way.
On EVM-chains or, say, Solana it all is controlled very easily though.