Legal Analysis of the Relationship Between Leader and Follower in Social Trading Transactions: Re-reading Traditional Contracts in the Context of Data-Driven Electronic Agreements
Keywords:
Social trading, copy trading, trading data, emergent contracts, leader, followerAbstract
This study examines the legal nature of the relationship between the leader and the follower in social trading transactions—particularly copy trading and mirror trading—and demonstrates that this relationship is, in essence, a “consensual legal act,” even though its performance is carried out through automated and algorithmic systems. A comparative analysis of this relationship within the frameworks of sale, lease of services, settlement (ṣulḥ), and reward contract (juʿālah) shows that each framework explains only part of the reality of this data-driven relationship. Ultimately, the study proposes the “electronic analytical services contract” as an emergent contractual form grounded in Article 10 of the Iranian Civil Code, which integrates elements of traditional contracts and is compatible with the principles of good morals, economic public order, and the Electronic Commerce Act. This framework provides an efficient model for regulating leader–follower relationships and for the lawful development of social trading within the Iranian legal system.
References
Ansari, S. M. (1988). Al-Makasib (Vol. 3). Islamic Media Library.
Aydinmehr, M. (2025). Legal Analysis of Smart Contracts in Iranian Law with Emphasis on Evidentiary Value, Validity, and Judicial Enforcement. Journal of Modern Fiqh and Law, 6(23), 1-19.
Bradgate, R. (2019). Commercial Law (Vol. 4). Oxford University Press.
Emami, S. H. (2010). Civil Law (Vol. 1). Islamieh Publications.
Healy, P. M., & Palepu, K. G. (2001). Information Asymmetry, Corporate Disclosure, and the Capital Markets. Journal of Accounting and Economics, 31(1-3), 405-440.
Jafari Langroudi, M. J. (2019). Legal Terminology. Ganj-e Danesh.
Katouzian, N. (2010). Legal Acts. Enteshar Joint Stock Company.
Katouzian, N. (2012). Property and Ownership. Enteshar Joint Stock Company.
Kharkesh, F., & Fathizadeh, A. (2020). Smart Contracts: Feasibility of Self-Executing Contracts in Iranian Law. Private Law Research Journal, 6(1), 42-44.
Khomeini, R. (1997). Sale (Bay') (Vol. 1). Institute for Compilation and Publication of Imam Khomeini’s Works.
Mousavi Bojnourdi, S. M. (1988). Al-Qawa'id al-Fiqhiyyah (Vol. 1). Dar al-Kutub al-Islamiyyah.
Murray, A. (2020). Information Technology Law: The Law and Society (Vol. 3). Oxford University Press.
Naser, M., & Sadeghi, H. (2022). Legal Validation and Challenges of Implementing Smart Contracts: A Comparative Study of Iranian and U.S. Legal Systems. Comparative Law Studies Quarterly, 8(29), 91-94.
Savelyev, A. (2017). Contract Law 2.0: Smart Contracts as the Beginning of the End of Classic Contract Law. Information & Communications Technology Law, 26(2), 119-125.
Scott, R. E. (2005). Incomplete Contracts and the Theory of Contract Design. Columbia Law Review, 56(2), 187-214.
Shahidi, M. (2016). Formation of Contracts and Obligations. Majd Publications.
Singer, P. (2013). The Ethics of Markets. Oxford University Press.
Werbach, K., & Cornell, N. (2017). Contracts Ex Machina. Duke Law Journal, 67(2), 425-430.
Womack, K. L. (1996). Do Brokerage Analysts’ Recommendations Have Investment Value? Journal of Finance, 51(1), 137-167.
Yusuf, A., & Martinez, R. (2025). Smart Contracts and Legal Enforceability: Decoding the Political Philosophy of Code as Law. Interdisciplinary Studies in Society, Law, and Politics, 4(2), 292-302.
Zakarinia, H., Gholampour, Z., & Bagheri, M. (2023). An Introduction to the Legal Dimensions of Algorithmic Trading in Securities Markets. Capital Market Law Quarterly, 2(2), 70-72.
Downloads
Published
Submitted
Revised
Accepted
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Abutaleb Koosha, Mohammad Hadi Daraei (Author); Hamideh Zaree

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.