Gerald Herbert/AP

When you're trying to make a website work for millions of people and are having trouble getting people to, well, actually use your site, what do you do? You enlist the help of a company that really knows what it's doing. The type of company that knows how to get people coming back to their site, sometimes coming over and over again. The type of company that can really take the problem into their own hands and wring every last drop of bother out of it. With around 150 employees worldwide, and half of them engineers, they've shown they are more than capable at providing a good job, so to speak.

That's why Pornhub has offered its services of building and maintaining a complex website to the flailing Affordable Care Act website. In an open letter published last week, the porn clip magnate graciously offered its services:

Even if Pornhub is offering a helping hand, will Obama take it? Probably not. While Pornhub admittedly deals with a huge amount of traffic, the Obama administration wouldn't be caught dead being helped by the porn industry – even if it is in their best interests.

But what if it is?

We talked to Corey Price, the Vice President at Pornhub, about the plan.

Esquire: How does Pornhub handle such a massive user load, so to speak?

Corey Price: Well that's a hard question. We start with the tip, and work slowly until we can accommodate the entire load.

How many people work at Pornhub?

We have over 150 employees across the world, with about half of them being engineers.. Keep in mind, we are an IT company.

The ACA website totally fumbled upon launch, leaving just a select few (including yours truly) able to access the site—but millions more unable to even get pages to load. How complicated is it to create a website that millions will use a day?

Hosting a website that over 35 million people a day flock to is no easy task. To create a website that can handle this type of traffic has to be done in steps, first building a scalable model, and continue adding capacity as the traffic volume grows. Everything must be done step by step. You can't take any shortcuts.

What could you offer the Obamacare / ACA site?

Overall, I'd offer to lend them our engineers. We work very hard to train everyone to be able to handle any challenge. It's no small task to accommodate the traffic volume they intended to. Since we specialize in high traffic websites, we are one of few companies who would have been able to get the site back on track. That's why we made the offer -- we have the utmost confidence in our teams to accomplish anything.

And finally, with all this pent up frustration and anger in DC, How could the politicians benefit from your wonderful website?

To answer this question, I'd like to refer you to our (safe for work) insights page and an article which focused on the traffic to our website during the government shutdown. It seems that the politicos in DC are already well aware of our sites stress relieving capabilities!

While Pornhub's offer is certainly a noble gesture, it was probably too sticky, politically, from the outset. Still, though, it's worth a thought. In fact, Julie Bataille, the communication director for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, was quoted as saying last Friday that "I think that would be pretty inappropriate and something we would not be interested in doing." Which is a shame. Pornhub might have actually had the answers.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io