Indeed I don't know enough about the EU or GDPR to say definitively, but I know for the US, there is generally nothing wrong with possessing leaked data, or it would not be so commonplace. There are often many online articles that discuss leaked data in depth, so you know they have it, and nobody is suing them for it. The NPD leak check site also appears to be legal and hasn't been challenged to my knowledge, and it even gives out people's complete address history and phone numbers, as well as partial SSN and DOB. There are also sites that regularly host "doxx" of people they like to make fun of, as well as leaked corporate IP, for years, and nothing has happened to them either.
refalo
Dunning-Kruger effect
Possessing PII is not illegal... it's only a problem for whoever leaked it originally. This is why some sites regularly host doxx info and never get taken down, even after many legal demands.
There have been several leaks with driver license and passport photos of people from all over the world, usually from sites or services that need to verify identity like for stock trading or porn.
True but you can at least have it require biometrics to reopen the app and you can still get notifications then because the db is technically unlocked.
protip: the "required" birth year is fake, it accepts any number >= 1900 and still returns all matches regardless of birth year
And just as easy for crooks with this same data to thaw it for you.
It has tons of dead people, duplicates, invalid entries, foreign residents, etc., basically anyone or anything that ever needed a SSN.
Unfortunately the US doesn't work that way. Unless you want to continue living under a rock, you have to deal with your credit.
I tried to create an account with TransUnion but it said the identity check failed and won't create an account, I have no idea what to do now.
Tiny Core has a minimum CPU of i486DX.
antiX might also work but I couldn't find a minimum CPU requirement listed, just that it has an x86 version.