It's funny: earlier we have had it stated that the reason that titles should be placed in a particular field is to help identify which individual of several similarly named people is the one you're looking for.
Now we're being instructed to OMIT information that is far more relevant for the exact same purpose, on some misguided attempt to allegedly adhere to some standard.
This is nonsense. And Remi and others who insist on trying to pretend that They Are Correct are doomed to fail, because they are not correct, and in fact they are misinterpreting those "standards" to suit their desires.
FACT: There is no "standard" which defines a "primary name" for individuals. If Remi or anyone tries to argue otherwise, they are simply proving that they DO NOT UNDERSTAND DATABASES.
FACT: Geni has provided a field for the name at birth, and has provided options so that those who want to produces pedigrees matching common genealogical practice can do so.
FACT: duplicating birth names in the "maiden name" field and the "Last name" field provides ZERO benefit when the individual was always known by one name, and REDUCES the information available when the individual was known by more than one.
FACT: attempting to prohibit the "last name" field from containing the name that the individual was best known by will create more work for people merging records, and provide no benefit at all. NB: every argument advanced for duplicating the birth name in the last name field is addressed by setting the display option. EVERY SINGLE ARGUMENT! This extra work is inevitable because of the design of Geni: the first thing it asks a new user is what they name IS. They do not ask "what was your birth name?".So anyone trying to pretend that Geni means you to put a birth name in that field is just plain wrong: they do NOT. Eventually, then, this new user will produce records that have to be merged with the big tree, and two things will happen: since the newcomer's records will have been guided into doing things The Wrong Way (according to the likes of Remi), actually identifying the merge candidates will be harder, and when you've identified matching individuals, the newcomer's data is going to have to be changed! This will lead to the there being a stylistic split: at some point, wherever the "historical" tree starts, records will be stored with one type of data in the "last name" field, and at some date the records will change style. So even more cleanup is then required.
And the biggest irony is that there is NO REASON for that work or this fuss. Nothing that Remi, Bjorn, or anyone else has stated as a "justification" for their ideals is anything of the sort. All they can justify is that the birth name should go in the field intended for the purpose, i.e. the "Maiden name".
Some have even argued at ridiculous length that this issues is about some kind of US or English biased practice. This is nonsense. A significant majority of the world's population currently and throughout history HAVE employed customs where names changed at marriage -- very often not according to the English style: the Spanish, Chinese and Japanese styles are different, but it's still a change!
So, cutting to the chase: Remi's "genealogists must do it this way" is utterly bogus and without a shred of support in the real world, because what he is talking about is explicitly supported by Geni using the "Maiden name" and the display option. He'll no doubt yell and scream, but at the end of the day if Geni simply changed the text on the screen to read "Birth name" instead of "Maiden name", you'd all see quite how feeble his argument really is.