A step forward that could influence how smart contracts are designed and verified.
Updated
November 27, 2025 3:26 PM

ChainGPT's robot mascot. IMAGE: CHAINGPT
A new collaboration between ChainGPT, an AI company specialising in blockchain development tools and Secret Network, a privacy-focused blockchain platform, is redefining how developers can safely build smart contracts with artificial intelligence. Together, they’ve achieved a major industry first: an AI model trained exclusively to write and audit Solidity code is now running inside a Trusted Execution Environment (TEE). For the blockchain ecosystem, this marks a turning point in how AI, privacy and on-chain development can work together.
For years, smart-contract developers have faced a trade-off. AI assistants could speed up coding and security reviews, but only if developers uploaded their most sensitive source code to external servers. That meant exposing intellectual property, confidential logic and even potential vulnerabilities. In an industry where trust is everything, this risk held many teams back from using AI at all.
ChainGPT’s Solidity-LLM aims to solve that problem. It is a specialised large language model trained on over 650,000 curated Solidity contracts, giving it a deep understanding of how real smart contracts are structured, optimised and secured. And now, by running inside SecretVM, the Confidential Virtual Machine that powers Secret Network’s encrypted compute layer, the model can assist developers without ever revealing their code to outside parties.
“Confidential computing is no longer an abstract concept,” said Luke Bowman, COO of the Secret Network Foundation. “We've shown that you can run a complex AI model, purpose-built for Solidity, inside a fully encrypted environment and that every inference can be verified on-chain. This is a real milestone for both privacy and decentralised infrastructure”.
SecretVM makes this workflow possible by using hardware-backed encryption to protect all data while computations take place. Developers don’t interact with the underlying hardware or cryptography. Instead, they simply work inside a private, sealed environment where their code stays invisible to everyone except them—even node operators. For the first time, developers can generate, test and analyse smart contracts with AI while keeping every detail confidential.
This shift opens new possibilities for the broader blockchain community. Developers gain a private coding partner that can streamline contract logic or catch vulnerabilities without risking leaks. Auditors can rely on AI-assisted analysis while keeping sensitive audit material protected. Enterprises working in finance, healthcare or governance finally have a path to adopt AI-driven blockchain automation without raising compliance concerns. Even decentralised organisations can run smart-contract agents that make decisions privately, without exposing internal logic on a public chain.
The system also supports secure model training and fine-tuning on encrypted datasets. This enables collaborative AI development without forcing anyone to share raw data—a meaningful step toward decentralised and privacy-preserving AI at scale.
By combining specialised AI with confidential computing, ChainGPT and Secret Network are shifting the trust model of on-chain development. Instead of relying on centralised cloud AI services, developers now have a verifiable, encrypted environment where they keep full control of their code, their data and their workflow. It’s a practical solution to one of blockchain’s biggest challenges: using powerful AI tools without sacrificing privacy.
As the technology evolves, the roadmap includes confidential model fine-tuning, multi-agent AI systems and cross-chain use cases. But the core advancement is already clear: developers now have a way to use AI for smart contract development that is fast, private and verifiable—without compromising the security standards that decentralised systems rely on.
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Updated
November 28, 2025 4:18 PM

A group of entrepreneurs coming up with different ideas. PHOTO: FREEPIK
If startup success stories usually make you picture cutting-edge tech, you might be missing a big part of the picture. Sometimes, the weirdest ideas shine the brightest, making real money and delighting both founders and customers. From ordinary rocks turned into pets to renting live chickens, these unusual startups show how far creativity and a pinch of humor can go.
If you think the business world is all suits and serious pitches, think again—welcome to the wonderfully weird side of entrepreneurship.

Owning a pet is a joy, but let’s be honest—it’s also a handful. Between shedding fur, endless feeding schedules, surprise messes and finding a sitter when you’re away, pet parenting is not exactly effortless.
Back in 1975, an advertising executive named Gary Dahl found himself joking about this very problem over drinks with friends. His solution for the “perfect” pet: a rock. No feeding, no walking, no grooming and absolutely no accidents on the carpet.
What started as a joke quickly snowballed into a real business. Smooth stones were sourced from Rosarito Beach in Mexico, then packed in playful cardboard “pet carrier” boxes with little air holes and a bed of straw. To make the experience even more cheeky, every Pet Rock came with a care manual that instructed owners to give their new companion sunlight, affection and, of course, a name.
It was absurd and hilarious, but it worked. Selling at US$3.95 apiece in the ’70s, Pet Rocks became a cultural phenomenon. Today, you can still find them on Amazon, but they will now set you back around US$29.99 or more. Would you bring home a Pet Rock? People in the ’70s sure did.

Back in 2013, Phil and Jenn Tompkins a couple duo, launched the company "Rent The Chicken" with one straightforward goal: give people a chance to try raising backyard hens and enjoy fresh eggs without the long-term commitment.
Through partnerships with local farmers across the U.S. and Canada, this backyard chicken rental startup brings egg-laying hens straight to people’s yards. It offers different rental packages, but a standard six-month rental costs around US$500. This usually includes two hens ready to lay within days, a portable coop, feed, food and water dishes and expert support for any chicken-related questions.
The chickens arrive in spring and stay until fall. When the season ends, families can choose to return the hens, extend the rental or even buy them for about US$40 each at the end of the contract.
Today, the company works with partners in 29 states, from Oregon to Texas, and in parts of Canadain p. For people outside those areas, an out-of-area purchase package that comes with three hens can be shipped anywhere in the 48 contiguous states in the U.S. for about US$1,550.
In a way, it’s a fun and hands-on path to food security — giving families the joy of collecting their own eggs and knowing exactly where their breakfast comes from.

By day, Gadlin worked as a full-time web developer for a television broadcasting company. Outside of work, he poured his energy into comedy and writing. That creative streak took him back to high school days, when he had drawn silly cats for a comic series called Silly Cats Comic.
With those doodles as his foundation and a bit of basic design know-how, Gadlin launched his website, “I Want to Draw a Cat For You” in 2011. The concept was as simple as it was funny: visitors would describe the cat of their dreams and Gadlin would personally hand-draw it, then send it their way.
This quirky startup idea landed him on Shark Tank, where he secured an offer of US$25,000 from investor Mark Cuban for a 33% stake in the business. Not bad for stick-figure cats.
When the site first launched, customers could pay extra US$5 for colour. Shipping cost US$1 if they didn’t mind the drawing arriving in a folded envelope, or US$5 for a flat mailer. For delivery within 48 hours, there was a US$19.95 rush fee that many customers were happy to pay.
These days, Gadlin leans more on digital delivery and limited runs of his cat drawings at US$50, rather than mailing every single piece of his art. What he once described as “mediocre cat drawings” has become proof that a simple, original idea can claw its way into the startup world.

Imagine arriving in a new city with no one to show you around. That is exactly the kind of situation where RentAFriend can help.
Launched in 2009 by Scott Rosenbaum, the unusual business was inspired by Japan’s “rental family” services, where people can hire a friend, a date or even a parent for a short period. Rosenbaum saw an opportunity to adapt that concept for North America, but with a focus strictly on platonic friendship.
Here’s how it works: Anyone can sign up as a “friend” for free by creating a profile, listing their interests and setting an hourly rate. People who want to hire pay a membership fee, typically around US$24.95 a month, to connect with friends across the platform.
With a rented friend, you can do pretty much anything platonic. Go sightseeing, hit a museum, catch a game, work out together or even bring them along to a party or family event. At its heart, RentAFriend connects people who need company with those happy to earn a little extra simply by being one.

Back in 2014, in the small town of Norwood, Ontario, Canada, three brothers—Jarrod, Darren and Ryan Goldin, set out to do something that sounded downright bizarre at the time: farm crickets for people to eat.
The idea first struck Jarrod after he saw a cricket-based nutrition bar on television. Around the same time, the UN released a report on edible insects as a sustainable food source. Suddenly, the “weird” idea didn’t seem so weird after all.
At Entomo Farms, crickets are raised in cage-free “cricket condos”, where they live in warm, dark spaces that mimic their natural habitat. They’re fed and cared for until they reach about six or seven weeks old, then humanely harvested using a CO₂ method. From there, they’re rinsed, roasted and ground into a fine powder—no additives, just pure cricket protein.
The appeal goes beyond novelty. Crickets are packed with nutrients and need far less land, feed and water than beef, making them both healthy and eco-friendly.
While their approach may seem unconventional, what drives Entomo Farms is simple: making sustainable, responsible food accessible to everyone.
These startups prove that innovation doesn’t always wear a serious face. Sometimes, it turns up wrapped in humor, curiosity or even a touch of absurdity, yet still manages to spark real change. From crickets turned into protein to chickens rented out by the season, each weird startup idea shows that entrepreneurship thrives when people dare to think differently.
While some of these unusual business ideas burned bright then faded, others are still evolving in the background, shifting from fads to niche services or steady, quiet companies. What they share is a willingness to test an idea most people would dismiss at first glance.
That is the real takeaway for founders. Weird startup ideas will not always scale into unicorns, yet they can test new consumer habits, open up fresh markets and shape culture in surprising ways. If you are building something new, there is space for products that make people laugh, think or raise an eyebrow before they reach for their wallet.