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Solved: The Minds Behind 'NSA' Billboard Reveal Themselves

The reveal.
BitTorrent
The reveal.

This ominous unsigned billboard was part of a campaign in San Francisco, New York and Los Angeles.
BitTorrent
This ominous unsigned billboard was part of a campaign in San Francisco, New York and Los Angeles.

Another statement adorned a building in New York's Midtown.
BitTorrent
Another statement adorned a building in New York's Midtown.

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BitTorrent says its core values are user privacy and control, and a decentralized, accessible web.
BitTorrent
BitTorrent says its core values are user privacy and control, and a decentralized, accessible web.

Someone's taken credit for the shadowy billboard on the 101 Freeway near San Francisco -- a plain white sign with black text reading "Your Data Should Belong To The NSA." We wondered about it last week, and got some interesting theories in the comments.

(That sign wasn't alone: There were billboards in Los Angeles and New York, too, with similar anonymous, Big Brother-ish messages like "The Internet Should Be Regulated" and "Artists Need To Play By The Rules.")

On Tuesday it was revealed that the mysterious messenger is BitTorrent, a technology company that created a peer-to-peer file-sharing protocol and is founded on the idea of an "open Internet."

You might know it as that service people use to download copyrighted episodes of Breaking Bad, or the latest screeners of Oscar-contending flicks. But the protocol has legitimate uses, including the release of music by "both signed and unsigned artists" and BitTorrent the company says it's also (legally) entering the TV program distribution business.

BitTorrent released a new billboard Tuesday that crosses out "The NSA" and reads instead: "Your Data Should Belong To You." Instead of "The Internet Should Be Regulated," the new version: "The Internet Should Be Regulated People-Powered."

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The messages were meant to be a commentary on the current state of the Internet, says Christian Averill, BitTorrent's director of communications.

"These statements represent an assault on freedom," he says. "They also, for the most part, represent attitudes Internet culture has accepted. Chips we've traded for convenience."

And they're also a clear advertising campaign: Unlike the old versions, these messages are prominently signed with the company's logo.

Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit www.npr.org.