@norman-oklahoma We don't have the record of survey requirements that you do here in NJ and having been licensed for 33 years, I have never used a rubber stamp of my seal on any document, but have rubber stamped complementary copies of paper surveys saying that the survey was prepared for the people certified to and reflets conditions as of the date of the survey, no others can rely on it for anything else than informational purposes.
As far as sealing mylars, it is not common here in NJ. I only had to do that once with a county two hours south of me. I drove the two hours to drop off the required number of paper and mylar prints for a condo plan and they rejected the mylar copies because they were not sealed. Two hours back to the office to get to my seal, sealed mylars that you could barely feel the bumps on, two hours back racing to get there before the end of their day and they accepted them. There's more to the story about the paper prints but I won that war with their own ordinance.
Pretty soon all the drafting will be done by computers for computers. Clients won't even need to look at a plan anymore, they'll just ask their agentic AI to extract whatever information they need at the time, like how many trees are on the property, Jarvis? or how many lots can I squeeze out of this empty paddock? Here in NSW, they did away with paper plans, everything has to be only electronically. Next year they're doing something even worse. They want everyone to send an XML file for the plans (plats) they register with the Office of Lands. It will be a total mess.