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The 2026 Polyfill Supply Chain Attack: How a Single JavaScript Library Compromised Thousands of Websites and What CISOs Must Do Now

Unmasking the Polyfill Breach: A Wake-Up Call for Digital Supply Chains

Corporate security has long grappled with perimeter defenses, but the digital age demands vigilance deep within the codebases powering modern enterprises. On January 27, 2026, a routine scan by Check Point Research uncovered a nightmare scenario: the Polyfill JavaScript library, a ubiquitous tool for browser polyfilling used by giants like Yahoo, AWS, and Microsoft, had been weaponized in a supply chain attack.1 Over the preceding week, attackers had hijacked the library’s content delivery network (CDN), injecting malware that targeted European users with cryptominers and phishing lures. This incident, affecting an estimated 100,000+ websites, exemplifies the fragility of third-party dependencies in web ecosystems.

Timeline of the Attack: From Stealthy Injection to Global Exposure

The breach’s origins trace back to early January 2026. According to Sonatype’s analysis, attackers compromised the Polyfill CDN hosted on cdn.polyfill.io around January 20.2 Initially, the malicious payload was geofenced to Europe, delivering a fake CAPTCHA page that harvested credentials and deployed JavaScript miners. By January 27, researchers at Check Point detected the anomalies: inflated CPU usage on test machines and suspicious redirects.

  • January 20-26: Malware deployment limited to EU IP ranges.
  • January 27: Public disclosure by Check Point; Polyfill.io taken offline.
  • January 28: Yahoo and AWS confirm impacts on legacy pages.
  • January 30: Microsoft patches affected docs.microsoft.com subdomains.

The stealth was masterful—code obfuscation and conditional loading evaded static scanners, only activating post-runtime.

Technical Breakdown: How Attackers Breached the Supply Chain

Exploitation Mechanics

Polyfill.io, maintained by a small team post-2023 Fenix Web acquisition, relied on a single CDN endpoint. Attackers likely gained access via stolen credentials or a supply chain compromise upstream, injecting