> Can I use a browser-based version of ffmpeg without having to release my 
> whole project as open-source?

These sorts of questions are very difficult to answer.
With a piece of commercial software you'd go to the people who owned it, and 
propose what you'd like to do, and they'd tell you if they were OK with it (and 
how much money they wanted).
With open source software there is, often, no central controlling entity. 
There's nobody you can go to and ask the question. In theory, you could enter 
into separate agreements with all the people who wrote the code, but with a lot 
of open source that would involve huge numbers of people, many of whom will be 
difficult or impossible to contact.
Therefore, the best you can usually do is to hire a lawyer and get legal advice 
based on the text of the license and your proposed use of the software. The 
problem is that you will need a very specialist lawyer, and this will almost 
certainly be much more expensive than just licensing a commercial alternative.
Whatever anyone think of the moral thinking behind the GPL, it does create some 
quite serious problems for people who want to use software in any circumstance 
that wasn't anticipated by the people who wrote it. And because they wrote it 
in roughly the space year 1989, quite a lot of situations which are now common 
were not anticipated.
Be aware that many of the responses you will have received to your enquiry, and 
those in response to this email, are likely to be rather lacking in objectivity.
P   
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