To be fair, Taylor really isn't nearly as bad as some.
I'm mixed on this - the home recording movement has completely democratized the process of making an album, which is both a good and a bad thing. The good news is that almost anyone can now, um, how to say this... I guess build a rig that has the potential to make a "professional" sounding recording, provided they're willing to take the time to learn and do it right. If you're writing songs and you want to turn your song sheets into an album, it's easier than it's ever been to do that, today.
The bad news, of course, is that almost anyone can make an album, so a potentially valuable filter in the form of the "record contract" has been rendered mostly irrelevant.
I guess ultimately I'm cool with it - the onus is now on the listener to determine what he or she likes to an extent that's never been possible before. Anyone can get on iTunes these days, so there's now a TON of stuff out there that previously was just too niche (or, shitty) to get recorded in the past, so if you're into pretty obscure stuff there's almost an infinite amount of it out there. You just have to find the quality through all the dross.
I'm perfectly OK that the album I'm working on now, an instrumental guitar album, never would have had a chance of existing 20 years ago because the market just wasn't big enough for an unknown guy with a all-consuming day job. I don't care if it sells, I just want to do it because it's fun.

(of course, I also don't expect to become the next Justin Beiber, so I'm probably way less annoying for that.

)