“remove anything in our servers that does not contribute to efficiency.”
Zuck removal happened immediately afterwards.
Facebook runs on four different server designs, each created to fulfil a specialist task, according to Mike Yang, a general manager and vice president of Taiwanese OEM Quanta. Quanta makes about a quarter of the world's laptop computers and has, of late, branched out into custom servers for big operators like Facebook. …
(First, disclaimer regarding my background, I'm a Signals Intelligence Collector, I do this for a living two weeks a year and weekend a month. Unfortunately, most of the hard math and examples behind this are classified in my case, so maybe a Civilian radio, microwave, or TV transmission engineer or a HAM who isn't so restricted can explain it in depth. My apologies, but I dont want to join Bradley Manning in Leavenworth).
I kind of doubt they worry about it in a datacenter that they own. Plus, with the frequencies as high as they are but without much power or a "real" transmitter behind them, they most likely cannot propagate too far in distance or into bands that are in use for communications outside of a small area. If they do, there's a major problem and the FCC needs to correct them.
Its probably noisy as hell in certain EM bands on their property but I doubt you'd be able to tell about 500 meters to a kilometer away except for maybe some residual noise on UHF (if there's a radio or TV tower nearby, it may be VERY obvious and obnoxious to the operator, but I doubt Facebook's stupid enough to do something like that and even then, conditions would have to be next to perfect to notice there was something interfering, due to the height and power behind those types of transmitters, plus they may have their neighbors filtering, Farcebook has quite a lot of money).
It might be something for the FCC to look into if it causes any disruption to their neighbors signals, or to other companies if the servers they have in CoLo centers also do not have their covers on, but I doubt it does. Its not something I would call a best practice because its an information and physical security risk ("Nice server you have there without covers on it, but you know what? It looks thirsty. I'm gonna give it a gallon of water, all across its motherboard, how's about that?") but I dont see any harm coming to others besides Facebook itsself and their users from this.
Still, it makes it somewhat interesting from a theoretical TEMPEST point of view, I wonder what transient signals you could intercept from their servers with them leaving the covers off. Too bad that would be harder than hell to research as a private citizen without risking a prison sentence.
Oh, it's easy to research it as a private citizen. That's been done and published. You don't monitor the servers, you monitor the LCD screens. Modern CPUs are running in multiple gigaherz using multiple cores, so the RFI would be worthless for monitoring. Yes, such things could be done in the days of the 6502, 6809, 68000 et al, but once CPUs got out-of-order execution and instruction caching, it was all over. After all, if you can't tell what's going on inside the chip when you have full bus access with a HP data analyzer, don't expect the NSA to do it from a block away.
And as far as sabotage, compare a saboteur vs knuckle-head developers. Who produces more down time?
What jurisdiction does the FCC have in Taiwan? None, I bet. And if the servers were in the US, I can assure you that a huge datacenter like that would be irrelevant to the FCC. The machines aren't actually broadcasting anything, and outside of the building a flaky street light would probably generate more RFI than those machines inside a metal building.