From an experiential standpoint: I've attached data directly to nodes without issue and never had a problem. From a specification standpoint, my interpretation is that doing so is not necessarily recommended, but is safe to the extent that the custom attributes don't conflict anything else.
In Common Infrastructure - Extensibility, the recommendation for authors (that's you) is to use only [data-*] attributes:
Authors can include data for inline client-side scripts or server-side
site-wide scripts to process using the data-*="" attributes. These are
guaranteed to never be touched by browsers, and allow scripts to
include data on HTML elements that scripts can then look for and
process.
And the requirement for a valid user-agent is to leave anything in the DOM it doesn't recognize.
User agents must treat elements and attributes that they do not
understand as semantically neutral; leaving them in the DOM (for DOM
processors), and styling them according to CSS (for CSS processors),
but not inferring any meaning from them.
So, my suggestion, along the same line as the W3C's aim of avoiding conflicts, is to create objects that refer to DOM elements. But, if you "must" tag weird things onto the DOM, rest assured that user agents are required to leave it there. But if you really must, it may be wise to use those data-*
attributes!
(I personally don't use them and tend to slap objects and values onto whatever's most convenient at the time. But, I may be jaded by about 15 years of hacks and "feature detection" for the non-compliance of the user agents. Even now, I don't think IE supports the data-*
standard ... )