While online behavior creates an enormous amount of digital data that can be the basis for social science research, to date, the science has been conducted piecemeal, one Internet address at a time, often without social or scholarly impact beyond the site's own stakeholders. Scientists lack the tools, methods, and practices to combine, compare, contrast, and communicate about online behavior across Internet addresses or over time. In response, we are building the infrastructure for computational social scientists, social scientists, and citizens to make corresponding advances in our understanding of online human interactions. In this chapter, we present our effort to (1) specify the Open Community Data Exchange (OCDX) metadata standard to describe datasets, (2) introduce concepts from the data curation lifecycle to social computing research, and (3) describe candidate infrastructure for creating, editing, viewing, sharing, and analyzing manifests.