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− | [[image:Fcc logo.png|thumb|right|upright=0.6|FCC logo.]] | + | [[image:Fcc logo.png|thumb|right|upright=0.35|FCC logo]] |
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| + | The '''FCC Declaration of Conformity''' or the '''FCC label''' or the '''FCC mark''' is a certification mark employed on electronic products manufactured or sold in the United States which certifies that the electromagnetic interference from the device is under limits approved by the Federal Communications Commission. |
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| ==Description== | | ==Description== |
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| + | The FCC label is found even on products sold outside the US territory, because they are either products manufactured in the US and had been exported, or they are also sold in the US. This makes the FCC label recognizable worldwide even to people to whom the name of the agency Federal Communications Commission is not familiar |
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− | The '''FCC Declaration of Conformity''' or the '''FCC label''' or the '''FCC mark''' is a certification mark employed on electronic products manufactured or sold in the United States which certifies that the electromagnetic interference from the device is under limits approved by the Federal Communications Commission. The FCC label is found even on products sold outside the US territory, because they are either products manufactured in the US and had been exported, or they are also sold in the US. This makes the FCC label recognizable worldwide even to people to whom the name of the agency Federal Communications Commission is not familiar | + | The Federal Communications Commission established the regulations on electromagnetic interference under Part 15 of the FCC rules in 1975. After several amendments over the years, these regulation were reconstituted as the Declaration of Conformity and Certification procedures in 1998. |