Personally, I would not put a cookie banner of any kind on my website. However, given this text:
The term 'strictly necessary' means that such storage of or access to information should be essential, rather than reasonably necessary, for this exemption to apply. However, it will also be restricted to what is essential to provide the service requested by the user, rather than what might be essential for any other uses the service provider might wish to make of that data. It will also include what is required to comply with any other legislation the person using the cookie might be subject to, for example, the security requirements of the seventh data protection principle.
Where the setting of a cookie is deemed 'important' rather than 'strictly necessary', those collecting the information are still obliged to provide information about the device to the potential service recipient and obtain consent.
I think it's clear why a more risk-conscious organization like Meta might take a more conservative reading of "Strictly necessary" that does not apply to e.g. bandwidth optimizations related to a device's DPI