After years of arguing for proper use of form elements and link elements, others are finally doing the same. More recently, this includes the articles The Anchor Button: Bad for Accessibility, Bad for Usability by Matt Long and Reinventing the hyperlink (with much humor!) by Heydon Pickering.
The main point is, please do the basics. When designing a website, ensure controls with button-type behavior (submitting form and opening a modal dialog) are designed as buttons and regular text links (go to an external page, anchor on page, or external document) are designed like text links (such as blue underlined text).
When developing a website, ensure buttons are coded as buttons (the button or input element) and links are coded as links (the anchor element). You could also use ARIA roles to denote button and link, but it’s always better to use the semantic HTML elements.
Read the article.