First of all, the Prime Minister never referred to two public servants; you talked about public servants, and there are many public servants. I think that is a little bit of a stretch.
Let's go back to the evaluation.
Thank you very much for tracking the cost for the year that you were there. At least we have a base to start with. The Auditor General also said that this application could have cost us as much as about $60 million. We also heard that the processing of paper applications or paper processing would have cost around $3. At 40 million transactions at $3 apiece, it's about $120 million.
If it's a $60-million application, that's $180 million just in cost avoidance, not valuation. Even if this application was topped at $60 million, we'd avoid potentially twice or three times the cost that the government would have incurred. If you look at it from a cost avoidance point of view, there was some value.
However, I'll ask you a question as a technical person. If there was an e-commerce application that had 18 million users and had anywhere from 40 to 60 million transactions within two years and helped facilitate transaction of goods in the billions of dollars, if we wanted to raise funds for that application and market it, what would it be valued at?