From time 6:30 to 6:40 of the video it is absolutely clear that standard mains isolation creepage is violated.
I thought with the mains, that it was 5mm for 120VAC and 8mm for 240VAC?
That is it, there is no other standard for mains creepage.
The mains isolation creepage laws (for 120VAC and 240VAC) are based on the fact that the mains can spike up to well above 1KV for short transients.
Ive gotten capacitive mains shocks from touching the outer plastic of 7/0.2mm wire with live mains in it...and that plastic is thicker than the combined mcpcb insulation and white heatsink covering seen in that video.
The only exceptions that I know of for mains creepage is when, like in an electric shower, the circuitry is not mains isolated, however, the on/off button is mechanically fitted such that theres no way you can be shocked from creepage or water ingress.
In the video you can see that the outer white covering of the heatsink is what can be touched, and indeed will be touched, since its the majority of the outer casing.
By the way, ive no idea if the guy who made that video is doing the tear-up legally, if its allowed to do that to a product on a public video, but its certainly helpful and if it leads to extra safety for people, then that's a good thing.
I am sure Feit will be interested that the assemblers didn't bother to use a full covering of heatsink paste.
I worked in an electric drives place once, and a load of drives came back failed, and with no heatsink pasted between heatsink and 3-phase rectifier.
The assembly staff said they didn't think the paste was necessary.
They didn't like using the paste as its sticky and doesn't easily come off clothes