Stablecoin issuer Tether has released an open-source operating system for Bitcoin mining, pitching it as a way to simplify operations, scale sites, and reduce reliance on proprietary tooling.
What Tether launched
In an X post on Monday, Tether announced the rollout of MiningOS (MOS).
The company said the software stack is modular and scalable, aimed at everyone from hobbyists to large institutions.
Tether said on its MOS website:
“The mining industry has long been limited by closed systems and proprietary tools. MiningOS changes that — introducing transparency, openness, and collaboration into the core of Bitcoin infrastructure.”
How MiningOS is positioned
Tether said MiningOS provides a self-hosted mining architecture that communicates with other devices through an integrated peer-to-peer network.
The release also includes a platform that lets miners adjust settings based on their scale and output requirements.
CEO Paolo Ardoino described MiningOS as a complete operational platform that can scale from a home setup to an industrial-grade site, including deployments across multiple geographies.
Open-source and compatibility claims
Tether said MiningOS is released under the Apache 2.0 License.
The company added that it is built on Holepunch P2P protocols, and claimed the design includes “no centralised services, no backdoors, and no third-party dependencies.”
Context and prior announcement
Tether first announced plans for an open-source Bitcoin mining OS in June last year, saying new miners should be able to compete without depending on expensive third-party vendors.
The company also framed the release as part of its broader push beyond stablecoins, following a series of investments across 2025.