In reply to NathanP:
It'll probably get pulled - I tried something similar last year and got a reply saying my review contravened their terms and conditions. I wrote the BMC article linked above - getting hold of an actual human at Amazon or eBay to explain the problem seems impossible, although I doubt they care anyway.
Trading Standards don't seem well equipped to deal with this - their answer is to purchase suspect kit and have it tested at great expense, and get the seller page shut down only for another page to appear overnight. It's extremely frustrating, and even the EU Commission which have EU wide responsibility for product safety (which includes us, for now) accept that there is little that can be done other than educating consumers.
The UIAA are taking a different tack, which is to try and get notified bodies in the Far East accredited to their safety label. This will make it cheaper and easier for producers there to get products certified - some of it is good enough, some close and some nowhere near. The trouble atm is being able to tell which is which.