Plagiarism Check
JUIKTI strongly opposes any case of plagiarism on its own merit in publishing. Committed to preventing plagiarism, including self-plagiarism.
Authors should ensure that they have written entirely original work, and if the author has used the work and/or words of others, that these have been appropriately cited or quoted. Papers found with such issues are automatically rejected, and authors are strongly advised.
The Jurnal Ilmu Komputer dan Teknik Informatika (JUIKTI) rejects all forms of plagiarism. We use Turnitin to check for plagiarism. An article is considered plagiarism if more than 30 percent similarity is found after filtering in a similarity check. Articles suspected of plagiarism will be returned immediately, and the author(s) will have their work rejected for 3 (three) years.
Editors will run plagiarism checks using Turnitin and iThenticate to track the plagiarism rate of media texts.
What is plagiarism?
Plagiarism refers to the use of another person's ideas, concepts, statements, or writings without proper attribution of the source. Plagiarism is a form of moral violation that falls into the category of theft, except that what is stolen is not physical property, but intellectual property. Failing to make prompt references to academics is a serious, even criminal, and punishable offense (see Article 113 of Law No. 28 of 2014 on Copyright).
What can be categorized as plagiarism?
According to the Indonesian Ministry of Education Regulation No. 17/2010 concerning the Prevention and Combating of Plagiarism in Higher Education, Chapter II, Article 2, paragraph (1), plagiarism includes but is not limited to:
a. referring to and/or quoting terms, words, and/or sentences without mentioning the source in the citation notes and/or without adequately stating the source;
b. randomly referring to and/or quoting terms, words, and/or sentences of data and/or information from a source without mentioning the source in the citation notes and/or without adequately stating the source;
c. using sources of ideas, opinions, views, or theories without adequately citing the source;
d. formulating in their own words and/or sentences from word and/or sentence sources, ideas, opinions, views, or theories without adequately citing the source;
e. submitting a scientific work produced and/or published by another party as their own scientific work without adequately citing the source.
What sources should be cited?
Every work, idea, and concept of others. Every paraphrase of the work, idea, and concept of others (must be referenced to the original source). Every quotation (partial or complete) must be enclosed in quotation marks and referenced to the original source.
How do you avoid plagiarism?
Use citation applications like Mendeley, Zotero, or Endnote.
Immediately note every source used. Don't delay.
Even in a paraphrase, it's necessary to include a reference to where the idea was taken from. Include analysis and responses, whether affirmations or rebuttals, to the author's ideas. Use a plagiarism checker application, such as Turnitin, Grammarly, or iThenticate, before submitting the article.






