"I was like, it was too good to be true, and I still fell for it," she told CNBC Make It.
Rowena transferred the crypto to an Instagram account she believed belonged to a finance professional managing investments for a friend.
"It's stopping and thinking, and it's having a conversation with someone," she told CNBC Make It last week.
"I had invested some money into crypto, which I'm going to hold my hands up and say I don't fully understand," Rowena told CNBC Make It.
"It's about making sure that wherever you're going for information, that it's a reputable source," Quinn-Cirillo told CNBC Make It.
Persons:
Carly Rowena, Carly Rowena Carly Rowena, Rowena, she'd, Rowena messaged, —, I'm, Carly Rowena Rowena, Akamai, Censuswide, Tara Quinn, Cirillo, Quinn, hasn't, Natalie Billingham, Billingham, she's
Organizations:
CNBC, YouTube, British Psychological Society, Facebook, Meta
Locations:
British, TikTok, Costa Rica, Akamai