Check Plagiarism

The Journal of Computer Engineering and Information Technology (JCEIT) is firmly committed to upholding the highest standards of academic integrity and publication ethics. Therefore, every manuscript submitted to this journal will undergo a plagiarism screening process before being considered for peer review and publication.

1. Plagiarism Screening

  • All submitted manuscripts are checked using plagiarism detection software (such as Turnitin / X Plagiarism Checker or other reliable tools).

  • The similarity index must not exceed 15% in total.

  • Similarity in a single source should not exceed 5%.

  • Manuscripts that exceed the acceptable similarity limit will be returned to the author for revision or rejected outright.

2. Types of Plagiarism

The following practices are considered plagiarism and are strictly prohibited:

  • Copying text, data, figures, or tables from other sources without proper citation.

  • Paraphrasing or rewording other works too closely without acknowledgment.

  • Self-plagiarism, i.e., submitting one’s previously published work without disclosure or permission.

  • Fabrication or manipulation of data, citations, or references.

3. Author’s Responsibility

  • Authors must ensure that the submitted work is original and properly cited.

  • All sources of information and previously published works that have influenced the manuscript must be acknowledged.

  • Authors are strongly encouraged to check their manuscripts using plagiarism detection tools before submission.

4. Editorial Decision

  • Manuscripts with minor similarity issues may be returned to the author for revision.

  • Manuscripts with major plagiarism issues will be rejected immediately and the author may be blacklisted from future submissions.

  • The editorial decision is final and non-negotiable.

5. Commitment to Ethical Publishing

By submitting a manuscript to JCEIT, authors agree to abide by the journal’s plagiarism policy and publication ethics. Upholding academic integrity is a shared responsibility between authors, reviewers, and editors to maintain the credibility of scholarly communication.