Nashville you say ^"
I can’t see that sharing our names can be seen as anything but being open and honest - I really don’t think we are compromising our security this way.^
So we are not suspicious - we are two ladies who choose not to post very often as we are both quite active and busy doing other things and cannot see that sharing our names is compromising any kind of personal security."
I don't know whether you are members also of other social networking groups like Facebook, but as you say you don't have much time, I assume not.
My opinion on this thread is split. On the one hand, I don't believe that there is any great danger in making plans via the Gransnet forum or through a zoom group, You would use your username and Gransnet PMs while everyone was a stranger to everyone else, but once you had met in person a couple of times and assessed each other, it would be almost the same as meeting up with people you had met in any other way.
However, on the other hand I do think that online it is essential to keep as much anonymity as you can, particularly on this OPEN forum, which can be read by anyone at all who can access the internet. True, you need to be a member to post, but no-one has to join GN to read the posts. They are even reproduced from time to time in articles in popular newspapers when a journalist comes across an example of older people saying something they can make sound selfish or stupid.
You are doing two things - inviting anyone reading to join a zoom meeting, where you and others will be meeting and when, perhaps arranging to give someone a lift to a venue, exchanging info about exactly where you live, chatting about your family and so on. At the same time you are quite happy to have your personal names (not just usernames) displayed, which I would never do unless I had met people in person, or corresponded with them enough to have it very clear in my head that I would trust them..
Meanwhile, under your usernames, you might post chatty snippets such as, perhaps, that you live alone, that you have lots of trees in your garden, that your menfolk work away from home all week, that you will be off to the sunshine on a certain date, that your dog is so friendly it would be no use as a guard-dog, that you have just bought a new computer that does everything except make the dinner . . . . and any lowlife who thought you sounded like an easy victim could work out very easily when you will be away and the house empty, or even at home alone in a secluded house with an expensive computer and the friendliest nonguard dog in the country. They could have joined your zoom group under a username, thus getting more useful information from the other members, then "decided" not to come to the meetup after all, and faded back into the crowd.
So be trusting, yes, but also be very aware that not everyone is to be trusted.