Correct. They still do, but there are also regulations that deal with the balance and the stability of those. Health Canada has regulations on the stability of those toys, as do other countries. That doesn't mean the product is dangerous or defective.
There are incidents that need to be collected and reported, assuming that the product is defective. However, if there aren't any incidents that rise to this, to what we call the “substantial product hazard”..... Those incidents will tend to confuse consumers, if they are published and the consumers read them. A lot of time is spent on the regulator side to analyze the defects and basically not develop any effective regulations going forward. The information is one thing, but it's what you do with the information that is the key to the whole thing about this. The information is collected to prevent additional injuries.