Conflict of Interest Policy
Journal of Applied Cryptanalysis & System Integrity (JACSI)
Definition
A conflict of interest (COI) exists when a participant in the editorial process (author, reviewer, or editor) has a relationship or interest that could unduly influence their judgment. JACSI distinguishes between:
- Financial COI: Employment, consultancy, stock ownership, honoraria, patents, or paid expert testimony related to the manuscript's subject
- Academic COI: Co-authorship (within 3 years), supervisor/student relationship (within 5 years), institutional affiliation, grant co-investigators, or manuscript collaboration
- Personal COI: Close personal relationships, professional rivalries, or other relationships that could bias judgment
Author Obligations
1. Declaration: All authors must declare all potential conflicts of interest at submission time
2. Funding: All funding sources for the research must be disclosed
3. Published statement: A COI statement is published with every article (including "The authors declare no conflicts of interest")
4. Employer/funder influence: Authors must declare if any funder or employer had a role in study design, data collection, analysis, manuscript preparation, or publication decision
Reviewer Obligations
1. Pre-acceptance screening: Before accepting a review assignment, reviewers must assess whether any COI exists
2. Mandatory recusal: Reviewers must decline if they:
- Are from the same institution as any author
- Have co-authored with any author within the past 3 years
- Have a supervisor/student relationship with any author (within 5 years)
- Have a financial interest in the outcome
- Feel unable to provide an objective assessment for any reason
3. Disclosure: If a potential COI is identified after accepting the assignment, the reviewer must notify the handling editor immediately
4. Confidentiality: Reviewers must not use information from the manuscript for personal advantage
Editor Obligations
1. Recusal: The Editor-in-Chief or handling editor must recuse themselves from any manuscript where a COI exists
2. Substitute handling: Recused manuscripts are handled by another Editorial Board member with no COI
3. Transparency: The editor handling a manuscript is identified in the published article metadata
4. No exploitation: Editors must not use unpublished manuscript information in their own research
Editor-in-Chief Self-Submission
When the Editor-in-Chief submits a manuscript to JACSI:
- The EiC is completely removed from the editorial process for that manuscript
- An Associate Editor or Board member is designated as handling editor
- The EiC has no access to reviewer identities, reports, or editorial correspondence for their submission
- The handling editor's decision is final and cannot be overridden by the EiC
Institutional COI
JACSI recognizes that the Editor-in-Chief's institutional affiliations create a structural COI risk. To mitigate:
- The endogeny policy (<=25% per calendar year) limits publications from editors' institutions
- Manuscripts from the EiC's institution are handled by a Board member from a different institution and country
Enforcement
Violations of this policy may result in:
- Rejection or retraction of the affected manuscript
- Removal from the Editorial Board
- Notification to the individual's institution
- Publication of a correction or editorial notice
- Reporting to COPE if the violation constitutes research misconduct
Reference
This policy follows COPE guidelines on conflicts of interest:
- https://publicationethics.org/guidance/flowcharts
- ICMJE Recommendations: http://www.icmje.org/recommendations/