The color codes for AC wiring that connects to Line power conflict with color codes used internally in modern equipment. Additionally the Black/White of USA color codes is Brown/Blue in the rest of the world.
The original IBM PC-XT had a 12 pin Molex connector using the following color code: Gnd-Black, +5 v red, -5 v white, +12 v yellow, -12 v blue.
The National Electrical Code (NEC) mandates green or green with yellow stripes or bare wire for ground connections, but assumes that you are truly connecting to ground, not "merely" chassis common. And we are not speaking about DC or analog or digital ground, as used in current discussions and sketches, but the ground that eventually connects to a copper plated rod sunk into the earth of your facility, your safety ground. The ground that is so low impedance that your protection devices will not fail do to a poor complete circuit to ground.
By the way, as far as line power connections go, what we used to call "hot" is now called "ungrounded", what used to be "neutral" is now "grounding", and "ground" is now called the "grounded" conductor.
Do what I am currently obliged to do: use one color of wire for everything, which forces the technicians to use service drawings if they are servicing the equipment. And not make mistakes based on memory.