"I don't believe the TikTok ban is going to be very effective for now, given that tens of millions are using it. I also don't see how exactly this ban will be implemented," leading tech policy and media consultant Prasanto K. Roy told IANS.
"This knee-jerk reaction of banning is impractical and doesn't solve the core problem. For instance, if there is abuse on Twitter, banning Twitter is not the solution," Roy added.
Any existing user of TikTok, who has the app installed on the smartphone, can share it with any such seeker through apps like ShareIt. Once the app is shared, the user can install the app and become a new user, said Faisal Kawoosa, Founder and Chief Analyst at techARC.
"There is a need to have a holistic approach to get rid of such increasing digital menace, which cannot be absolved by technology and/or legal recourse alone," Kawoosa said.
The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology had asked Google and Apple to block the app following the Supreme Court's refusal to stay the original Madras High Court order on April 3.
Expressing concern over the "pornographic and inappropriate" contents on TikTok, the high court had directed the Centre to ban the app.
The Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court on Tuesday refused to lift the ban on TikTok and set April 24 as the next hearing date. Owned by Chinese technology company ByteDance, TikTok claims that it has over 120 million monthly active users in India.
So already a considerable number of users are on the platform. Although the app is now not available on Google Play Store and Apple App Store, people can get them from the third-party app stores such as apkpure, androidapkbox, uptodown and apkmirror, techARC said.
"It will be next to impossible to enforce any law or order with such fragmented markets," it added.
According to Roy, TikTok needs to do more to ensure age restrictions are followed, and use Artificial Intelligence (AI) and other means to take down inappropriate content.
"Banning sets a poor example and reference point -- and sets us up for retaliation, in a global digital economy where India has made its mark," he added.