You have to report non-spam as well. If all that is reported is spam, then there is nothing to compare it against. You bias the system to recognize everything as spam and your false positives (non-spam classified as spam) soar (where 0.5% is too high).
AFAIK, revoking something that's not already in Razor's database won't do anything. To make a comparison to Bayesian systems, Razor only accepts error-based training for non-spam.
So if you get something that's labeled incorrectly, you should definitely revoke it. But if it's not labeled, I don't believe it will have any effect.
Kelson Vibber
SpeedGate Communications <www.speed.net>
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