Rubbish, it isn’t user error if the equipment malfunctions.
I think that the point that posters are making is that there may be technological failure, but the
proximal cause of ultimate outcome may nonetheless be user error.
There may be failure of technology, but users can still react and salvage the situation. Several posters have made reference to aviation, such as comments on how prominent the sound of a stall horn is. Yet, even though stall warnings are prominent, pilots still mange to stall airplanes.
One extraordinary example of the relationship between user error and equipment failure, in which equipment failure was the initial problem, but user error was the proximal cause of the tragic outcome, was Air France 447. The equipment failure was pitot tube icing. As a result, the pilots lost airspeed information, and the autopilot turned off. Notwithstanding that issue, the aircraft was still very flyable - it remained entirely airworthy - the control surfaces were fully functional, the engines remained capable of producing full thrust. But, the pilot flying the aircraft (right seater) stalled the aircraft, by gradually pulling back on the yoke, probably out of anxiety, perhaps complicated by distraction. According to the investigative reports, the stall warning sounded prominently some 75 times over the next 4+ minutes, as the pilots literally flew the aircraft into the ocean. The proximal cause of the accident was user error, not equipment failure.