It goes much further than just "often aligning with EU laws":
Almost all EU regulations and rights – except those pertaining to agriculture, fisheries and the customs union – apply to the whole of the EEA, meaning all of the EU + Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein (in addition, many also apply to Switzerland, but in that case through a complicated set of bilateral Swiss-EU agreements that sorta-kinda emulate EEA membership, but isn't).
For all intents and purposes, apart from the three areas stipulated above + voting rights, Norway is an EU member. A business that operates in Norway (outside of the agriculture or fisheries sector) can be seen as operating in the EU. Likewise, Norway-based users of a service with a business presence in the EU are protected by EU laws, like the GDPR.
Norwegians have the same access to the EU labor market as, say, Germans. And EU citizens have the same right to take up residence in Norway and interact with the Norwegian state under the same conditions as a Norwegian.
Almost all EU regulations and rights – except those pertaining to agriculture, fisheries and the customs union – apply to the whole of the EEA, meaning all of the EU + Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein (in addition, many also apply to Switzerland, but in that case through a complicated set of bilateral Swiss-EU agreements that sorta-kinda emulate EEA membership, but isn't).
For all intents and purposes, apart from the three areas stipulated above + voting rights, Norway is an EU member. A business that operates in Norway (outside of the agriculture or fisheries sector) can be seen as operating in the EU. Likewise, Norway-based users of a service with a business presence in the EU are protected by EU laws, like the GDPR.
Norwegians have the same access to the EU labor market as, say, Germans. And EU citizens have the same right to take up residence in Norway and interact with the Norwegian state under the same conditions as a Norwegian.