The short version
Norway · SMS API sits inside a category the telecommunications industry calls A2P — application-to-person — messaging. Every text an airline sends when a boarding gate changes, every login code from a bank, every "your package is out for delivery" note from a logistics carrier, every one-time discount from a retailer — they all travel over the same rails: short, ordered, store-and-forward packets that the world's mobile networks have been carrying for more than thirty years.
What has changed is the plumbing behind those texts. In the consumer era, SMS was person-to-person over a single carrier. In the enterprise era, a message originates in a database, a queue or a workflow engine — is handed to a platform like SveaSMS via a REST API — and lands on a device in Osaka, Oslo or Ouagadougou seconds later, having crossed multiple operators, regulators and billing systems along the way. That path is the product.