Plagiarism Policy
Turnitin plagiarism detection technologies will be used to check papers submitted to the Inform: Jurnal Ilmiah Bidang Teknologi Informasi dan Komunikasi for plagiarism. Notify: Papers that contain plagiarism or self-plagiarism will be rejected right away by the Journal Ilmiah Bidang Teknologi Informasi dan Komunikasi.
A member of the editorial team checks papers for plagiarism and resemblance before sending them to reviewers. Papers submitted to Inform: Jurnal Ilmiah Bidang Teknologi Informasi dan Komunikasi must have a similarity score of no more than 1% to each source and a similarity level of less than 20% (excluding bibliography).
The act of presenting someone else's ideas or words as your own without their consent, recognition, or credit, or without properly citing your sources, is known as plagiarism. Plagiarism can be anything from a direct copy of someone else's work to paraphrasing it. We highlight the following potential circumstances in order to properly determine whether an author has plagiarized:
- Without permission, acknowledgment, or citation of the original source, an author might literally replicate another author's work word for word, in whole or in part. By contrasting the text or work that is suspected of plagiarism with the original source, this behavior can be recognized.
- Reproducing a significant portion of another author's work without that author's consent, acknowledgment, or citation is known as substantial copying. The term "substantial," which is frequently used in relation to intellectual property, can be interpreted in terms of both quality and quantity. The relative value of the copied text in relation to the entire work is referred to as quality.
- Taking concepts, words, or phrases from a source and rewriting them into new sentences is known as paraphrasing. When the author fails to properly cite or acknowledge the original work/author, this behavior turns unethical. This type of plagiarism is the most challenging to spot.