Short answer - not code (you are not bound by it anyway), but will be fine for your purpose.
Longer answer - In the sense of "server racks" and other infrastructure that is to be "grounded" (not cord and plug utilization equipment). The ground needs to be bonded to the buildings grounding system. This typically means a bare conductor (or double insulated... but let's ignore that) running back to the main panel bonding point. It can't be "unplugged" and is at the same potential as the building's electrical bond.
In your case, the ground is a bit of overkill in the sense that it is not required and there is little safety hazard to begin with. There may be some benefit to it providing some interference shielding. The "ground" if tied to a receptacle can be "unplugged" but this is not an issue in your situation and you are not bound by "code" anyway. That said, if any of you "rack" stuff is rack mount with a metal case, then that will likely suffice to bond the rack to ground through the equipment case anyway.