Fast answer
Copy trading reduces manual execution control.
With a signal, the trader decides whether to enter, size, skip, or modify the trade. With copy trading, execution may happen automatically or semi-automatically, so account permissions, position sizing rules, maximum drawdown, and stop behavior need stricter review.
The less control you have over execution, the more proof you need before connecting funds.
Comparison
Where the due-diligence questions differ.
Crypto signals
Check clarity, timestamps, stops, targets, updates, deleted calls, and whether followers can reasonably execute the call.
Copy trading
Check account permissions, copy ratio, max allocation, drawdown stops, fee structure, and whether exits copy correctly.
Manual control
Signals leave the final click to the trader, which adds responsibility but can reduce blind automation risk.
Automation risk
Copy trading can multiply mistakes quickly if leverage, sizing, or stop rules are unclear.
Proof standard
Copy trading needs account-level risk evidence.
A signal room can be reviewed from message records and result sheets. A copy-trading product needs additional evidence: copy settings, slippage, position sizing, fees, execution timing, maximum drawdown, and what happens if the lead trader changes strategy.
How to compare
Use the same evidence mindset, then add execution checks.
Do not compare a signal provider's best screenshots against a copy trader's live account curve. Use matching periods, include losses, separate deposits from trading profit, and label every missing field. The safer conclusion is often "not enough evidence yet."