Former FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler initially proposed the plan, which would have required cable companies to make their systems work with third-party devices, without the need for a CableCard, over a year ago. Doing so would have saved cable subscribers a few bucks a month promoting competition within the industry and loosening the iron grip on consumers that cable companies now enjoy.

Had it passed, cable company apps would have been required to run on any device operating with an iOS, Android or Windows OS, including Apple TV and Roku boxes. Unsurprisingly, cable companies like Comcast, COX and Time-Warner all heavily lobbied against the idea.

On Wednesday 19 GOP lawmakers signed and delivered a letter to the newly-installed FCC Chairman, asking that he close the docket on the proposal's proceedings, which officially ends the debate on matter, killing the proposal outright. "We are writing to ask that you close the docket on the set-top box proceeding... and signal clearly to consumers, content producers, consumer electronics manufacturers, and video programming distributors that the Commission's consideration of the set-top box proposal is at an end," the letter reads.

But don't worry. The GOP lawmakers are certain that pay-tv companies -- the same ones that fought so stridently against this regulation and the loss of income that it would have entailed for them -- will be given "a clear sign that they can bring technological advances to set-top boxes and video delivery without fear that the Commission [will] overturn them by regulation" by this action. Don't hold your breath.