Very often statements about zero objects are vacuously true - i.e. the converse simply isn't true. This happens because attributing some property to a zero object (zero vector of some vector space, the zero function or the empty set, to name a few), which represents the idea of no object at all, is quite silly if not impossible.
As to why we refer to such solutions as "trivial solutions", it is because many of these solutions are very easy to find, and are quite dull, so finding that solution or saying that it exists doesn't grant one a deeper understanding of the problem at hand.
Asking mathematical questions (at every level) can lead one into a blessed rabbit hole - given one has some passion for problem solving, or math, or both - and the beauty or usefulness of the answer - maybe even the sheer scope of new questions and directions one can go to afterwards - will not reveal themselves from looking at the solution which one can obtain "for free", which as we've seen is often the zero solution.