**TL;DR** Links need to be *accessible and distinguishable*, but that can and should be achieved by means other than underlining, because that *sacrifices readability*. Inline links are supposed to be subtle. They need to be visible and accessible *without disrupting the normal flow of text*. Underlines are very distracting and make the text significantly more difficult to read. It is absolutely poor design to underline random swaths of characters in body text, where the *content* is the primary focus, not the presence of links. In fact, the links should blend in as much as possible. The reader should be able to pick them out if she wants to, but they should not reach out and strangle her. She should also be able to ignore the links when reading, if she wants. If the links are too visible and we cannot ignore them, [it interferes with our comprehension](https://benjaminvw.files.wordpress.com/2009/01/destefano.pdf). The brain becomes overtaxed, increasing cognitive load. Eventually, we either get sidetracked and lose the ability to focus entirely, or we simply become overwhelmed and therefore unable to retain an understanding of what we have read. This problem is magnified even more for readers with poor language/literacy skills—a different kind of accessibility problem. (Granted, we are not doing a perfect job of this here. Inline code formatting still sucks. It completely disrupts the flow of the text, sticking out like a `sore thumb`, and makes the content much more difficult to read.) This is consistent with the general Stack Exchange model, where posts are supposed to be entirely self-contained, with links provided for supplemental reference purposes only, not as a primary feature of the content. If we were a link aggregation service, then making links stick out might be sensible. We are, however, not. We are more like an online encyclopedia. Wikipedia doesn't underline links in their articles either, for a similar reason. Even if we suppose for a moment that there is someone who simply *cannot* identify links unless they are underlined, there is no way that the site would become "unusable" to this person. The links in posts are supplemental. If you can't find them, or they don't exist, you don't miss anything. There is a further problem with underlining links, and that is that underscores get lost in the underlines. This might not be a huge issue on other sites, but it is certainly relevant on Stack Overflow, a programming Q&A site where underlines often feature prominently in code. This idea that underlining text makes it "look like" a link is an outdated notion and, worse, harkens back to a *bad standard* that emerged in the early days of the web, when technological limitations and technophiles-turned-designers created a typographical disaster. Any stylistic variation other than underlining would have been a better choice as the default style for links. If it *really were* (still) an absolute standard, followed consistently across the web, I suppose you'd have to have a good reason to deviate from it. I think the fact that it actively interferes with readability is a good enough reason. But even if you disagree, it is simply no longer the case that the majority of links on web pages are underlined. Almost all companies with a substantial web presence choose not to underline their links. Google doesn't do it, Amazon doesn't do it, Apple doesn't do it, Microsoft doesn't do it, Wikipedia doesn't do it, Twitter and Facebook don't do it, Netflix doesn't do it, Walmart doesn't do it, etc., etc. If you want to make clickable elements that are not part of the body text look more affordable, I would have no objection to that. The "edited x hours ago" link, for example, is not part of the body text, and it is not very obvious to the uninitiated that it is a link. I agree this is a potential accessibility problem. You could underline it if you wanted to, but I still think underlining is a poor choice for increasing visibility and affordability. So you could change the color to increase its contrast with the foreground text, change its background color, add a border, add a shadow, or any number of other things to make it look clickable.