Authors, including co-authors, recognize their primary responsibility for the accuracy of the submitted data and commit to upholding the following principles:
- Disclose any potential conflicts of interest that may influence the publication.
- Ensure the absence of contractual obligations or ownership interests that could impact the publication of the submitted information.
- Refrain from submitting a publication to the ScienceBook service that has been sent to any other publisher and is under consideration for acceptance elsewhere. If ScienceBook service places such a submission, it may be treated as an "In press" publication, potentially causing harm to both the publisher and the ScienceBook service's reputation and finances.
- Ensure that the publication is not defamatory, does not breach personal confidentiality, is not under a court order, and does not contain information that could pose a significant risk to public health if used.
Publication Ethics in the Activities of the Publication Distributor The Publication Distributor (ScienceBook service) assumes responsibility for publishing the author's content, necessitating adherence to the following core principles:
- Rigorously review and verify all submissions for publication. The ScienceBook service reserves the right to reject submissions.
- Evaluate all submissions for publication impartially, irrespective of race, color, political views, religion, gender, ethnicity, social background, property status, language, or other characteristics, as well as the authors' place of work.
- Promptly consider all submissions for publication.
- Maintain confidentiality regarding the content of pending submissions, sharing information only with individuals involved in the submission's processing.
- Respect the intellectual independence of authors.
- Facilitate conflict resolution if convincing evidence is provided that the publication lacks the necessary permissions for Open Access and/or is "pirated."
- Remove unlawfully posted submitted publications from the site and its database, if such violations are proven.
EXCEPTION: Individuals and legal entities residing in the Russian Federation, a state engaged in armed aggression against Ukraine, and the Republic of Belarus, as well as individuals located within the territories of these states, are exempt from the non-discrimination principle.