The world is being quietly rearranged by people who write very long documents.


The title they went with Certificates of Compliance; Correction Noisy translates that to

US product safety regulators fix a typo, but the new rules still apply


US product safety regulators corrected a typo in a new rule about product compliance certificates. The change only affects how the dates are written, not when companies must follow the new rules. This means the original compliance deadlines for manufacturers and importers remain unchanged.
This document is a bureaucratic housekeeping item. It clarifies how dates are presented in a regulation, but it does not change the actual requirements or timelines for businesses. The underlying rule, which revises how Certificates of Compliance are handled, still stands as originally published. This correction simply makes the document conform to federal publishing standards.
There is nothing to watch here; this is a non-substantive correction to a document.

If you insist
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