I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it is about licensing or legal issues, not programming or software development. See here for details, and the help center for more.
@pevik For the record, the question is far too old to migrate. There's a 60 day migration window, which you missed by a solid 8 years (and it's about 11 years too late now)
Update (November 2014): A Comprehensive Tutorial and Guide contains a clear an detailed description of the (L)GPL and its usage, including distribution. I recommend it for more details.
...though, I suppose the " provide everything that allow the user to relink the application " part covers also providing source under other than LGPL, so it can be re-compiled and then re-linked.
I'm mostly sure this comment is absolutely correct. If you statically link a LGPL library, then the application itself must be LGPL. We have had our lawyer double-check on this in the past. Dynamically linking to a LGPL library is the only way to avoid becoming LGPL.
@Inkeliz comments should not be used for (new) questions. But your question would now be considered off-topic. If you use a lgpl ffmpeg binary (for example on windows ffmpeg.exe), then you either do not link to it at all, or it would be dynamically. As you use the lgpl version, you don't need to share the source of your program in both cases. You must offer the ffmpeg source code, but because you don't change it, it is sufficient to point to the official website.
@Stevan Your comment directly contradicts LGPL's own official FAQ. That is now linked to by the answer, and the answer has also been updated with that info: you do NOT need to licence your code under LGPL if you statically link, just provide some way for users to update library code and relink your executable against it. That includes giving suitable unlinked binaries, or providing your source code under a proprietary licence. (I'm not sure what comment you meant by "this comment" - I think maybe you were referring to the answer (at the time).)
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