Francois describes the central issue well: the LGPL will provide a way for the vendors to trust each other.
Let those of us who understand this simply start releasing our Wine changes under the LGPL, regardless of what anyone else does. That should make it clear which way the main tree should go.
First of all what "those of us"? You mean "those of you"? Searching the mailing lists I see that you from time to time have provided various testing, suggestions or other information but I can see no patches.
Secondly understand what?
If you are so clever that you REALLY understand what the LGPL means, please enlighten us poor ignorant people.
In particular answer Roger Fujii's challenge: I challenge anyone to show me what "work that uses the library", "work based on the library", and "whole" means in the context of wine.
The problem is that I'm pretty sure you can't.
In any case the trust mechanism of LGPL is dependent on the how the license is interpreted. If you are not certain or pretty sure how a judge or jury will interpret the license, all trust issues are meaningless.
Futhermore I have tried to show that you can't both have the cake and eat it. In order for the LGPL or for that matter any license to provide the "trust" that you are after you must also prevent things that are quite reasonable to assume are legal. Like Joe Hacker using his proprietary library to get another proprietary application to run under Wine in order to avoid dual booting and share it with fellow hobbyists.
Even if you dismiss this as "Oh well, even so I think it is worth it.", I have another question: How is this compatible with freedom 3 of the free software definition?
Free Software Definition (freedom 3): The freedom to improve the program, and release your improvements to the public, so that the whole community benefits.