On here, yep. There are also two (or perhaps three) pro-guilt websites with a handful of participants that are still fighting the True Believer fight. Everyone else has been enlightened.
And there are still loose ends and unfinished business in this case to discuss. The biggest of these is Knox's application to the European Court of Human Rights in respect of her criminal slander conviction (which currently still stands), on the grounds that she was unlawfully coerced and unlawfully denied access to legal advice, and was thus denied her human rights. If the ECHR rules in her favour (as many of us believe is highly probable, based on multiple pieces of evidence corroborating her claims), Italy will have little choice but to annul that conviction too, thereby clearing the slate totally for Knox.
In addition to that, there's also the continuing aftermath of the murder trials to discuss. The Netflix docu-film is part of that process. There will undoubtedly be more, in the form of journalistic investigation and potential investigation by the authorities in Italy. Recently, for example, the investigating prosecutor in this case (Mignini) was officially censured by his regulatory body for the improper way in which he denied Knox and Sollecito access to legal advice for over two days from the point of their detention right up until moments before their first arraignment hearing (Mignini invoked an entirely inappropriate section of the criminal code, intended for suspects in organised crime or terrorism cases, to do so).
So there's still some life in the old case yet. Thankfully, though, the biggest decisions have been made.