Think of the network block 65.222.202.0/24 as a Zip code that represents Verizon Street in Washington DC. If you stand at the end of Verizon Street, there's a building belonging to SAIC [number 0-15] who are a defense contractor (they don't own the whole street, however it looks like it from certain angles). Next door to SAIC is a dusty looking building belonging to an Internet Services company [number 16-31], then there's some mystery building belonging to the US government [number 32-47] and next door to *that* is a building with no name on [number 48-55]. That's where the Torsploit data went. Moving on, there's are a couple of factory units and rather oddly a horse stables, then some other offices and factory units, a few other unmarked buildings (some of which are clearly empty) and near the end is Federated IT who work for law enforcement and the government [number 184-191] and finally a school [number 240-255]. Incidentally, a few streets over in a nearby ZIP code is the main office for the NSA. Think of
this table as being a directory of the buildings on Verizon Street.
Now, although you can't tell WHO is in number 48-55, you can tell what sort of neighborhood you are in, and you know what sort of thing goes on in Washington DC. You're not standing next to the bus station in Tiraspol, for example. Incidentally, although there were a few lights on a couple of days ago, number 48-55 is now resolutely dark again.
There's no "NSA" sign on this building, and no way to tell for certain who is inside. But you can probably make an educated guess about what sort of organisation might be using the space on that particular street..