First rule of LEDs is to always use a resistor. If you put a LED directly to 5V, too much current flows through it and it heats up and fries itself. It won't melt any PC power supply wires I assure you.
If you quote the datasheet, 25mA per segment is the maximum safe it can work forever. As you say the LEDs read "40", that's 10 segments? 250mA. Yes, there are 100mA fuses, but it is not enough. In real life, you put a fuse to protect your PC power supply and its wires, the PSU can give out 10-30 amps. Also, it is there to protect the target load from heating up and burning. In this case, I'd say 500mA or 1A fuse, but as I said, it only protects from a short circuit.
Also consider how bright the LEDs are at 25mA, when you have 10 of them blazing. It is possible it is bright enough at 5mA or 10mA.
So, you need a resistor to limit current. Please see the following link : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LED_circuit. As you see, the resistor size depends somewhat on LED forward voltage which depends on LED color. It is easiest if each LED has its own resistor, but if you are feeling to solder less resistors, you can put 2-3 LEDs in series, but it will be more difficult to balance their brightnesses. You can also put LEDs in parallel, and have a single resistor, but depending on manufacturing tolerances, one LED could be brighter than others, and some may not light up at all.