Abstract The  number of US breaches reported publicly for all levels of government  between 2005 and mid-2016 was 314 with at least 148,491,010 records (not  individuals) compromised. In spite of a decade of work to break down  bureaucratic silos between agencies, partly in support of eGovernment  initiatives, the standard of care over digital assets is not uniform  either vertically (at multiple layers of government) or horizontally  (across government service or functional categories). Meanwhile,  agencies are often dependent upon external contractors that may not  follow best practices for information asset protection (e.g.,  contractors implicated in the successful exploit against the US OPM,  publicized in 2015). This extends the security chain, increasing the  possibility for exploitation of a weak link. From a hacker’s  perspective, confusion at jurisdictional boundaries offers attack  opportunities throughout the chain. New uses for WAPs supporting smart  transporta...