How many formal portraits have been made? A few billion, maybe. That's a high estimate. Sports photos? That's another few billion, maybe. A bigger one. And so on.
Your argument isn't very
well-reasonsed, is it? Facebook (being the "new" MySpace) isn't exactly a standard for what the world is doing anymore.
How many sports photos are taken with camera phones... that people
actually like? I'm thinking that's a rather low number. Camera phones are miserable at action photography.
While we're at it... how many safari photos are shot with camera phones? The "problem" here, is that the camera phone doesn't have long lenses. By the time you are close enough to the tiger or brown bear to get the same photo you might get with a DSLR... you'll be its next lunch. If you'd like to use the camera phone, that's fine... I think I'll be renting a nice long lens.
We're not exactly running low on people who come to this forum to express their displeasure with their current phone or camera and ask what they can do to capture photos of their active children in low-light?
How many brides are looking to hire wedding photographers who use camera-phones? I'm guessing that's another fairly low number.
The list goes on and on.
The typical person who owns a smart-phone with a camera is happy to use it for snaps, but usually recognizes it for what it is... a great tool that you always have with you... for "snaps". I like the notion that my phone has a small compact camera built-in. For example... the last time the little water-refilling thingy on my toilet tank broke, I snapped a photo with my iPhone and took it to my friendly neighborhood hardware store... wherein the kind gentlemen at the store knew
exactly what I needed. Oddly enough... that same photo did
not make it onto my wall as a framed print.
If the lighting is great and the subject isn't moving and there are no other factors that make the shot difficult to capture... then
every camera is a good camera. It all falls apart when the shooting conditions become challenging or the client's expectations are high.
I'm not snubbing the camera phone... sometimes they are great. They'll easily displace point & shoot cameras (they've done significant damage to that market already and I have very little doubt that within a handful of years they'll go the way of 8-Track tapes and Dymo "squeeze" label-makers.) I would expect camera phones to be popular among those who would previously have used a simple point & shoot camera. They are a long way from being able to encroach on DSLR territory.