In that case you won't be able to access to these files. It may happen in 
future when the volume of all content of the network will rise drastically. 
I think this problem will be solved by that time with something like Storj, 
<http://storj.io/> Filecoin, <http://filecoin.io/> or IPFS 
<https://ipfs.io/>+ Ethereum <https://ethereum.org/>.

Zeronet uses only cryptography from Bitcoin). Domain names in zeronet is 
organized via Namecoin, but one can escape registering any and create site 
with name something like 1EU1tbG9oC1A8jz2ouVwGZyQ5asrNsE4Vr for free.

 For now I host about 60 p2p sites personally, and it takes about 2,5 Gb of 
my HDD. 
On Thursday, January 28, 2016 at 10:01:57 AM UTC, Tobias Beer wrote:
>
> Hi,
>  
>
>> When you visit a new zeronet site, it tries to find peers using the 
>> BitTorrent network so it can download the site files (html, css, js...) 
>> from them. Each visited site becomes also served/seeded by you.
>>
>
> What happens if there are no "peers" seeding those files?
> Sounds to me there must be some server-like "peers" hanging about there,
> otherwise most all resources would be unavailable half the time.
>
> As a side-note, anything involving bitcoin is highly suspicious to me.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Tobias. 
>

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