I am not taking your words out of context. I am showing you that your whole argument is based on fallacy and misconstrued logic. The auction did not prohibit a bid such as mine. Online auctions are typically handled in the fashion I bid. Ergo the bid is valid. Being the generous and understanding soul that I am, if Jeremy had come to me and said "Hey, I did not intend this to be a normal auction, but a flat auction, do you want this for 66 BTC, the maximum you were willing to pay?" I would have paid him 66 BTC, even though it was within my rights to demand the auction be concluded as per the rules..
However, that's not what happened. Instead, he saw the price was too low and decided to "reopen" the auction for "silent bids." Even though my maximum bid was ALREADY PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE. It's not a silent auction if the bids are known in advance. In the public auction, my bid was KNOWN to anyone who cared to look - it was 66 BTC, no more. It was not an open ended bid like you keep trying to make it out to be... this is functionally what your argument hinges on, and since it's fallacious to claim as such, when my bid clearly was NOT open ended, your argument falls apart.
His auction clearly stated "NO RESERVE." He didn't get the price he wanted, so he changed the terms and actually instituted a reserve after the fact (nominally 40 BTC). He got his 105 BTC (presumably Antares is good for it), instead of half or 1/3 of that. Very convenient. Very sneaky. Very shady. Very dishonest.