> Undoubtedly so but I have yet to see one that doesn't make mistakes a human would be unlikely to.
Absolutely, AI is very rarely human in its failure modes, and often has novel and exciting failure modes instead.
But, on average… or so the marketing claims… it makes fewer mistakes.
For a while, it was possible to improve upon super-human chess AI by pairing them with a human; the combination was called a centaur. Eventually the AI got too good even for that as they stopped making the sorts of mistakes humans could spot, but in the meantime, even though they were superhuman, they had failure modes that we could help out with.