That's an odd choice, because prime numbers routinely show up in important applications in cryptography. To actually solve RH would likely involve developing new mathematical tools which would then be brought to bear on deployment of more sophisticated cryptography. And solving it would be valuable in its own right, a kind of mathematical equivalent to discovering a fundamental law in physics which permanently changes what is known to be true about the structure of numbers.
Ironically this example turns out to be a great object lesson in not underestimating the utility of research based on an eyeball test. But it shouldn't even have to have any intuitively plausible payoff whatsoever in order to justify it. The whole point is that even if a given research paradigm completely failed the eyeball test, our attitude should still be that it very well could have practical utility, and there are so many historical examples to this effect (the other commenter already gave several examples, and the right thing to do would have been acknowledge them), and besides I would argue they still have the same intrinsic value that any and all knowledge has.
> To actually solve RH would likely involve developing new mathematical tools which would then be brought to bear on deployment of more sophisticated cryptography.
I doubt that this is true.