The co-founder and the most important spokesperson of Square's Jack Dorsey has confirmed that, Square to allow merchants to accept Bitcoin native transactions from today. And he also said, "bitcoin was built to be used: open, decentralized, resilient. Current tax rules make buying a coffee a taxable event. we wrote a little something - it’s time to make bitcoin everyday money."
You seem to don't understand that Jack Dorsey and Square can not do anything with tax policy from the governement, now and in future.
Square is now using the Cash App and Lightning Network to support Bitcoin as a currency, and through this, it is offering POS machines to make Bitcoin a truly native transaction. This is great news that Bitcoin is now a currency and the biggest advantage is that transactions that used to take 10 to 30 minutes can now be completed in seconds.
Another thing you misunderstood, that Jack Dorsey and Square did not innovate anything new, according to the news and your post, that they only use Bitcoin Lightning Network that has been here for several years since 2017. There are many applications that accept Bitcoin Lightning Network, not only Cashapp.
The transaction time of Bitcoin Lightning Network is faster than Bitcoin on-chain (with an average block time is 10 minutes), but it is not kind of technical innovation from Jack Dorsey and Square.
There are Bitcoin sidechains which are followed in
Sidechain Observer - Bitcoin L2 Projects & current state of development.Many people may misunderstand the headline, but that's not the point. I actually wanted to explain that Square has made everyday transactions usable and easy for ordinary people by using the Lightning Network, which is a new direction, i.e. a new way of Bitcoin transactions. Sometimes, people misunderstand because the presentation of words and the content are different, because I am not promoting Square or the Lightning Network here, but rather I am talking about presenting the easy use of Bitcoin to ordinary people. I wanted to explain a new chapter in practical terms, not about technological innovation.