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I have submitted my review paper for publication to more than two journals. I was unaware of the consequences. The paper got accepted at al three journals. They asked for payment and copyright etc. I haven't processed anything as I only want to publish it in one journal only. I also became aware that it's unethical. So far, I only have the acceptance emails, but no further processing has been done by me. What can I do now to publish my paper? I think that one of the three journals is best one and I want to publish my paper there. What do I have to do so that I'm not being unethical nor breaking any rules?

Buffy
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    related, possible duplicate: https://academia.stackexchange.com/questions/21742/is-it-ethical-to-withdraw-a-paper-after-acceptance-in-order-to-resubmit-to-a-bet – Sursula May 30 '22 at 08:39
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  • why did you submit to three papers in first place?
  • why do you use your real name?
  • did you claim at submission each one was the only submission?
  • – EarlGrey May 30 '22 at 08:47
  • related, possible duplicate: https://academia.stackexchange.com/questions/6100/why-should-the-scientific-community-avoid-double-submissions – Sursula May 30 '22 at 08:52
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    I suspect this might be relevant: https://academia.stackexchange.com/q/2158/64 – JRN May 30 '22 at 10:19
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    "What can I do now to publish my paper?" if you act unethically, then you would be better off thinking of those that you have treated unethically, rather than considering only yourself. You ought to email the editors of the three journals explaining the circumstances and apologising. Hopefully at least one of them will still be willing to publish the paper, and then you can make a choice without further ethical issues, – Dikran Marsupial May 30 '22 at 11:20
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    To expand on @JoelReyesNoche’s comment: There are a few things about your situation that are unlikely unless you have been submitting to predatory publishers: 1) All three journals accepted the paper about the same time. 2) All journals are pay-to-publish. 3) All three journals accepted your manuscript (assuming that you have little publishing experience and no proper mentoring on this). 4) You have not previously wondered what to do about peer-review comments from one journal when improving the manuscript for another. – Wrzlprmft May 30 '22 at 12:37
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    "They asked for payment" What? The only situation in which I would pay someone to take things I produced from me is when I need a garbage disposal. Of course, if your work is of that quality, then I have nothing to say, but otherwise my recommendation would be to withdraw from all three and to submit to some decent place. And don't worry about the ethics: anything short of outright murder would be super-duper ethical with respect to such scoundrels. – fedja May 30 '22 at 18:35
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    I suspect that inexperience generally, but specifically inexperience with predatory journals that deliberately *do not* ask about duplicate submissions ,is the problem. It's easy to fall into the trap of saying off the cuff that the OP behaved unethically but that viewpoint is only reached when you have experience with ethical, non-predatory journals. And as for not submitting anything to a journal that wants money ... well, all of the PLOS journals, and, I think, all the BMC journals, require payment and they're generally well regarded – CrimsonDark Jan 04 '23 at 10:36
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    Please don't downvote this question just because you disagree with OP's behavior. This looks like a perfectly legitimate question to me, and having it here is helpful for future visitors, so that they don't repeat the same mistake. Punishing openness with downvotes only encourages more lies. – Federico Poloni Jan 04 '23 at 11:17