A person shall be entitled to a patent unless -
<snip>
A person shall be entitled to a patent unless -
(a) the invention was known or used by others in this country, or patented or described in a printed publication in this or a foreign country, before the invention thereof by the applicant for patent, or
(b) the invention was patented or described in a printed publication in this or a foreign country or in public use or on sale in this country, more than one year prior to the date of the application for patent in the United States, or"
So actually, your lawyer may have been mistaken, or in your situation, it was actually a matter of you never had your invention published, save for in a commercial advertisement over a year before the other guy's claim. If you had published the things like OSE apparently does, then you wouldn't have even needed the "more than one year for sale" defense. That's just based on what I think it's saying in the full entry, not just (b). I'm referring to the exact same section, but you left out the other aspects..Please make sure that you understand that the information provided here is being provided freely, and that no kind of agreement or contract is created between you and the owners or users of this site, the owners of the servers upon which it is housed, the individual Open Source Ecology Wiki contributors, any project administrators, sysops or anyone else who is in any way connected with this project or sister projects subject to your claims against them directly. You are being granted a limited license to copy anything from this site; it does not create or imply any contractual or extracontractual liability on the part of MediaWiki or any of its agents, members, organizers or other users.
There is no agreement or understanding between you and Open Source Ecology Wiki regarding your use or modification of this information beyond the [/wiki/GNU_Free_Documentation_License GNU Free Documentation License] (GFDL); neither is anyone at Open Source Ecology Wiki responsible should someone change, edit, modify or remove any information that you may post on Open Source Ecology Wiki or any of its associated projects."
"Jurisdiction and legality of content
Publication of information found on Open Source Ecology Wiki may be in violation of the laws of the country or jurisdiction from where you are viewing this information. The MediaWiki database is stored on a server in the United States of America, and is maintained in reference to the protections afforded under local and federal law. Laws in your country or jurisdiction may not protect or allow the same kinds of speech or distribution. Open Source Ecology Wiki does not encourage the violation of any laws; and cannot be responsible for any violations of such laws, should you link to this domain or use, reproduce, or republish the information contained herein."
So I don't think that OSE can be held responsible for any use or misuse of the detailed information contained in the wiki. It seems that's where all the usable information is anyway. If there is no contractual agreement, then there is no liability for anyone, as nothing was ever agreed upon in the first place, other than that there is nothing agreed upon as to who is liable for what. And all this is consistent with federal and local laws, at least in the USA. No other country can enforce some international law, if other nations are not in agreement with them. Usually this would require some international treaty in order to be effective, I think.. I think OSE is in the clear, based on these facts.
OpenSourceHardwareLicenses, don't sound like it has actual legal precedent, however Prior Art definitely does.
http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/OSE_Specifications
"In May 2005, Daniel Wallace filed suit against the Free Software Foundation in the Southern District of Indiana, contending that the GPL is an illegal attempt to fix prices (at zero). The suit was dismissed in March 2006, on the grounds that Wallace had failed to state a valid anti-trust claim; the court noted that "the GPL encourages, rather than discourages, free competition and the distribution of computer operating systems, the benefits of which directly pass to consumers".[57] Wallace was denied the possibility of further amending his complaint, and was ordered to pay the FSF's legal expenses."
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